Approximate equality
Sometimes, when testing whether the solution to a task (for example, here on Rosetta Code) is correct, the difference in floating point calculations between different language implementations becomes significant.
For example, a difference between 32 bit and 64 bit floating point calculations may appear by about the 8th significant digit in base 10 arithmetic.
- Task
Create a function which returns true if two floating point numbers are approximately equal.
The function should allow for differences in the magnitude of numbers, so that, for example,
100000000000000.01 may be approximately equal to 100000000000000.011,
even though 100.01 is not approximately equal to 100.011.
If the language has such a feature in its standard library, this may be used instead of a custom function.
Show the function results with comparisons on the following pairs of values:
- 100000000000000.01, 100000000000000.011 (note: should return true)
- 100.01, 100.011 (note: should return false)
- 10000000000000.001 / 10000.0, 1000000000.0000001000
- 0.001, 0.0010000001
- 0.000000000000000000000101, 0.0
- sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), 2.0
- -sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), -2.0
- 3.14159265358979323846, 3.14159265358979324
Answers should be similar to the Python code example, except for the fifth case, which may well vary depending on how your function handles comparison with (exactly) 0.0.
Factor
The ~
word takes three arguments: the two values to be compared, and an epsilon value representing the allowed distance between the two values. A positive epsilon performs an absolute distance test, an epsilon of zero performs an exact comparison, and a negative epsilon performs a relative distance test (as required by this task).
<lang factor>USING: formatting generalizations kernel math math.functions ;
100000000000000.01 100000000000000.011 100.01 100.011 10000000000000.001 10000.0 /f 1000000000.0000001000 0.001 0.0010000001 0.000000000000000000000101 0.0 2 sqrt dup * 2.0 2 sqrt dup neg * -2.0 3.14159265358979323846 3.14159265358979324
[ 2dup -1e-15 ~ "%+47.30f %+47.30f -1e-15 ~ : %u\n" printf ] 2 8 mnapply</lang>
- Output:
+100000000000000.015625000000000000000000000000 +100000000000000.015625000000000000000000000000 -1e-15 ~ : t +100.010000000000005115907697472721 +100.010999999999995679900166578591 -1e-15 ~ : f +1000000000.000000238418579101562500000000 +1000000000.000000119209289550781250000000 -1e-15 ~ : t +0.001000000000000000020816681712 +0.001000000100000000054917270731 -1e-15 ~ : f +0.000000000000000000000101000000 +0.000000000000000000000000000000 -1e-15 ~ : f +2.000000000000000444089209850063 +2.000000000000000000000000000000 -1e-15 ~ : t -2.000000000000000444089209850063 -2.000000000000000000000000000000 -1e-15 ~ : t +3.141592653589793115997963468544 +3.141592653589793115997963468544 -1e-15 ~ : t
Perl 6
Is approximately equal to is a built-in operator in Perl 6. Unicode ≅, or the ASCII equivalent: =~=. By default it uses a tolerance of 1e-15 times the order of magnitude of the larger comparand, though that is adjustable by setting the dynamic variable $*TOLERANCE to the desired value. Probably a good idea to localize the changed $*TOLERANCE as it will affect all comparisons within its scope.
<lang perl6>for
100000000000000.01, 100000000000000.011, 100.01, 100.011, 10000000000000.001 / 10000.0, 1000000000.0000001000, 0.001, 0.0010000001, 0.000000000000000000000101, 0.0, sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), 2.0, -sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), -2.0, 100000000000000003.0, 100000000000000004.0, 3.14159265358979323846, 3.14159265358979324
-> $a, $b { say "$a ≅ $b: ", $a ≅ $b;
}
say "\nTolerance may be adjusted.";
say 22/7, " ≅ ", π, ": ", 22/7 ≅ π; { # Localize the tolerance to only this block
my $*TOLERANCE = .001; say 22/7, " ≅ ", π, ": ", 22/7 ≅ π;
}</lang>
- Output:
100000000000000.01 ≅ 100000000000000.011: True 100.01 ≅ 100.011: False 1000000000.0000001 ≅ 1000000000.0000001: True 0.001 ≅ 0.0010000001: False 0.000000000000000000000101 ≅ 0: True 2.0000000000000004 ≅ 2: True -2.0000000000000004 ≅ -2: True 100000000000000003 ≅ 100000000000000004: True 3.141592653589793226752 ≅ 3.14159265358979324: True Tolerance may be adjusted. 3.142857 ≅ 3.141592653589793: False 3.142857 ≅ 3.141592653589793: True
Python
<lang python>from numpy import sqrt from math import isclose
testvalues = [[100000000000000.01,100000000000000.011], [100.01, 100.011],
[10000000000000.001 / 10000.0, 1000000000.0000001000], [0.001, 0.0010000001], [0.00000000000000000101, 0.0], [sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), 2.0], [-sqrt(2) * sqrt(2), -2.0], [100000000000000003.0, 100000000000000004.0], [3.14159265358979323846, 3.14159265358979324]]
for (x, y) in testvalues:
maybenot = "" if isclose(x, y) else "NOT" print(x, "is", maybenot, "approximately equal to ", y)
</lang>
- Output:
100000000000000.02 is approximately equal to 100000000000000.02 100.01 is NOT approximately equal to 100.011 1000000000.0000002 is approximately equal to 1000000000.0000001 0.001 is NOT approximately equal to 0.0010000001 1.01e-18 is NOT approximately equal to 0.0 2.0 is approximately equal to 2.0 -2.0 is approximately equal to -2.0 1e+17 is approximately equal to 1e+17 3.141592653589793 is approximately equal to 3.141592653589793
REXX
Since the REXX language uses decimal digits for floating point numbers (and integers), it's just a matter of choosing
the number of decimal digits for the precision to be used for arithmetic (in this case, fifteen decimal digits).
<lang rexx>/*REXX program mimics an "approximately equal to" for comparing floating point numbers*/
numeric digits 15 /*what other FP hardware normally uses.*/
@.= /*assign default for the @ array. */
parse arg @.1 /*obtain optional argument from the CL.*/
if @.1= | @.1=="," then do; @.1= 100000000000000.01 100000000000000.011
@.2= 100.01 100.011 @.3= 10000000000000.001 / 10000 1000000000.0000001000 @.4= 0.001 0.0010000001 @.5= 0.00000000000000000000101 0.0 @.6= sqrt(2) * sqrt(2) 2.0 @.7= -sqrt(2) * sqrt(2) '-2.0' @.8= 100000000000000003.0 100000000000000004.0 @.9= 3.14159265358979323846 3.14159265358979324 end do j=1 while @.j\== /*process CL argument or the array #s. */ say say center(' processing pair ' j" ",71,'═') /*display a title for the pair of #s. */ parse value @.j with a b /*extract two values from a pair of #s.*/ say 'A=' a /*display the value of A to the term.*/ say 'B=' b /* " " " " B " " " */ say right('A approximately equal to B?', 65) word("false true", 1 + approxEQ(a,b) ) end /*j*/ /* [↑] right─justify text & true/false*/
exit /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */ /*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/ approxEQ: procedure; parse arg x,y; return x=y /*floating point compare with 15 digits*/ /*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/ sqrt: procedure; parse arg x; if x=0 then return 0; d=digits(); numeric digits; h=d+6
numeric form; m.=9; parse value format(x,2,1,,0) 'E0' with g "E" _ .; g=g *.5'e'_ %2 do j=0 while h>9; m.j=h; h=h%2+1; end /*j*/ do k=j+5 to 0 by -1; numeric digits m.k; g=(g+x/g)*.5; end /*k*/; return g/1</lang>
- output when using the internal default inputs:
═════════════════════════ processing pair 1 ══════════════════════════ A= 100000000000000.01 B= 100000000000000.011 A approximately equal to B? true ═════════════════════════ processing pair 2 ══════════════════════════ A= 100.01 B= 100.011 A approximately equal to B? false ═════════════════════════ processing pair 3 ══════════════════════════ A= 1000000000 B= 1000000000.0000001000 A approximately equal to B? true ═════════════════════════ processing pair 4 ══════════════════════════ A= 0.001 B= 0.0010000001 A approximately equal to B? false ═════════════════════════ processing pair 5 ══════════════════════════ A= 0.00000000000000000000101 B= 0.0 A approximately equal to B? false ═════════════════════════ processing pair 6 ══════════════════════════ A= 2.00000000000000 B= 2.0 A approximately equal to B? true ═════════════════════════ processing pair 7 ══════════════════════════ A= -2.00000000000000 B= -2.0 A approximately equal to B? true ═════════════════════════ processing pair 8 ══════════════════════════ A= 100000000000000003.0 B= 100000000000000004.0 A approximately equal to B? true ═════════════════════════ processing pair 9 ══════════════════════════ A= 3.14159265358979323846 B= 3.14159265358979324 A approximately equal to B? true