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math/README.md
Benjamin Morel 5ccc6641b5 Fix typos
2015-06-28 19:29:25 +02:00

7.4 KiB

Brick\Math

A library to work with arbitrary precision numbers.

Build Status Coverage Status License

Installation

This library is installable via Composer. Just define the following requirement in your composer.json file:

{
    "require": {
        "brick/math": "0.4.*"
    }
}

Requirements

This library requires PHP 5.6, PHP 7 or HHVM.

Although the library can work seamlessly on any PHP installation, it is highly recommended that you install the GMP or BCMath extension to speed up calculations. The fastest available calculator implementation will be automatically selected at runtime.

Project status & release process

While this library is still under development, it is well tested and should be stable enough to use in production environments.

The current releases are numbered 0.x.y. When a non-breaking change is introduced (adding new methods, optimizing existing code, etc.), y is incremented.

When a breaking change is introduced, a new 0.x version cycle is always started.

It is therefore safe to lock your project to a given release cycle, such as 0.4.*.

If you need to upgrade to a newer release cycle, check the release history for a list of changes introduced by each further 0.x.0 version.

Package contents

This library provides the following public classes:

  • Brick\Math\ArithmeticException: exception thrown when an error occurs.
  • Brick\Math\BigInteger: represents an arbitrary-precision integer number.
  • Brick\Math\BigDecimal: represents an arbitrary-precision decimal number.
  • Brick\Math\BigRational: represents an arbitrary-precision rational number (fraction).
  • Brick\Math\RoundingMode: holds constants for the rounding modes.

Overview

Instantiation

The constructor of each class is private, you must use a factory method to obtain an instance:

$integer = BigInteger::of('123456'); // accepts integers and strings
$decimal = BigDecimal::of('123.456'); // accepts floats, integers and strings

$rational = BigRational::of('123', '456'); // accepts BigInteger instances, integers and strings
$rational = BigRational::parse('123/456'); // accepts fraction strings

Avoid instantiating BigDecimal from a float: floating-point values are imprecise by design, and can lead to unexpected results. Always prefer instantiating from a string:

$decimal = BigDecimal::of(123.456); // avoid!
$decimal = BigDecimal::of('123.456'); // OK, supports an unlimited number of digits.

Immutability

The BigInteger, BigDecimal and BigRational classes are immutable: their value never changes, so that they can be safely passed around. All methods that return a BigInteger, BigDecimal or BigRational return a new object, leaving the original object unaffected:

$ten = BigInteger::of(10);

echo $ten->plus(5); // 15
echo $ten->multipliedBy(3); // 30

Parameter types

All methods that accept a number: plus(), minus(), multipliedBy(), etc. accept the same types as of() / parse(). As an example, given the following number:

$integer = BigInteger::of(123);

The following lines are equivalent:

$integer->multipliedBy(123);
$integer->multipliedBy('123');
$integer->multipliedBy($integer);

Chaining

All the methods that return a new number can be chained, for example:

echo BigInteger::of(10)->plus(5)->multipliedBy(3); // 45

Division & rounding

BigInteger

Dividing a BigInteger always returns the quotient of the division:

echo BigInteger::of(1000)->dividedBy(3); // 333

You can get the remainder of the division with the remainder() method:

echo BigInteger::of(1000)->remainder(3); // 1

You can also get both the quotient and the remainder in a single method call:

list ($quotient, $remainder) = BigInteger::of(1000)->divideAndRemainder(3);

BigDecimal

When dividing a BigDecimal, if the number cannot be represented at the requested scale, the result needs to be rounded up or down. By default, the library assumes that rounding is unnecessary, and throws an exception if rouding was in fact necessary:

BigDecimal::of('1000.0')->dividedBy(3); // throws an ArithmeticException

In that case, you need to explicitly provide a rounding mode:

echo BigDecimal::of('1000.0')->dividedBy(3, RoundingMode::DOWN); // 333.3
echo BigDecimal::of('1000.0')->dividedBy(3, RoundingMode::UP); // 333.4

By default, the result has the same scale as the number, but you can also specify a different scale:

echo BigDecimal::of(3)->dividedBy(11, RoundingMode::UP, 2); // 0.28
echo BigDecimal::of(3)->dividedBy(11, RoundingMode::DOWN, 6); // 0.272727

There are a number of rounding modes you can use:

Rounding mode Description
UNNECESSARY Assumes that no rounding is necessary, and throws an exception if it is.
UP Rounds away from zero.
DOWN Rounds towards zero.
CEILING Rounds towards positive infinity. If the result is positive, behaves as for UP; if negative, behaves as for DOWN.
FLOOR Rounds towards negative infinity. If the result is positive, behaves as for DOWN; if negative, behaves as for UP.
HALF_UP Rounds towards "nearest neighbor" unless both neighbors are equidistant, in which case round up. Behaves as for UP if the discarded fraction is >= 0.5; otherwise, behaves as for DOWN.
HALF_DOWN Rounds towards "nearest neighbor" unless both neighbors are equidistant, in which case round down. Behaves as for UP if the discarded fraction is > 0.5; otherwise, behaves as for DOWN.
HALF_CEILING Rounds towards "nearest neighbor" unless both neighbors are equidistant, in which case round towards positive infinity. If the result is positive, behaves as for HALF_UP; if negative, behaves as for HALF_DOWN.
HALF_FLOOR Rounds towards "nearest neighbor" unless both neighbors are equidistant, in which case round towards negative infinity. If the result is positive, behaves as for HALF_DOWN; if negative, behaves as for HALF_UP.
HALF_EVEN Rounds towards the "nearest neighbor" unless both neighbors are equidistant, in which case rounds towards the even neighbor. Behaves as for HALF_UP if the digit to the left of the discarded fraction is odd; behaves as for HALF_DOWN if it's even.

BigRational

The result of the division of a BigRational can always be represented exactly:

echo BigRational::parse('123/456')->dividedBy('7'); // 123/3192
echo BigRational::parse('123/456')->dividedBy('9/8'); // 984/4104

Serialization

BigInteger, BigDecimal and BigRational can be safely serialized on a machine and unserialized on another, even if these machines do not share the same set of PHP extensions.

For example, serializing on a machine with GMP support and unserializing on a machine that does not have this extension installed will still work as expected.