+2011-04-20 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
+
+ Make the Lisp reader and string-to-float more consistent.
+ * data.c (atof): Remove decl; no longer used or needed.
+ (Fstring_to_number): Use new string_to_float function, to be
+ consistent with how the Lisp reader treats infinities and NaNs.
+ Do not assume that floating-point numbers represent EMACS_INT
+ without losing information; this is not true on most 64-bit hosts.
+ Avoid double-rounding errors, by insisting on integers when
+ parsing non-base-10 numbers, as the documentation specifies.
+ Report integer overflow instead of silently converting to
+ integers.
+ * lisp.h (string_to_float): New decl, replacing ...
+ (isfloat_string): Remove.
+ * lread.c (read1): Do not accept +. and -. as integers; this
+ appears to have been a coding error. Similarly, do not accept
+ strings like +-1e0 as floating point numbers. Do not report
+ overflow for some integer overflows and not others; instead,
+ report them all. Break out the floating-point parsing into a new
+ function string_to_float, so that Fstring_to_number parses
+ floating point numbers consistently with the Lisp reader.
+ (string_to_float): New function, replacing isfloat_string.
+ This function checks for valid syntax and produces the resulting
+ Lisp float number too.
+
2011-04-19 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
* syntax.h (SETUP_SYNTAX_TABLE_FOR_OBJECT): Fix setting of
#include <math.h>
-#if !defined (atof)
-extern double atof (const char *);
-#endif /* !atof */
-
Lisp_Object Qnil, Qt, Qquote, Qlambda, Qunbound;
static Lisp_Object Qsubr;
Lisp_Object Qerror_conditions, Qerror_message, Qtop_level;
{
register char *p;
register int b;
- int sign = 1;
- Lisp_Object val;
+ EMACS_INT n;
CHECK_STRING (string);
xsignal1 (Qargs_out_of_range, base);
}
- /* Skip any whitespace at the front of the number. Some versions of
- atoi do this anyway, so we might as well make Emacs lisp consistent. */
+ /* Skip any whitespace at the front of the number. Typically strtol does
+ this anyway, so we might as well be consistent. */
p = SSDATA (string);
while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t')
p++;
- if (*p == '-')
- {
- sign = -1;
- p++;
- }
- else if (*p == '+')
- p++;
-
- if (isfloat_string (p, 1) && b == 10)
- val = make_float (sign * atof (p));
- else
+ if (b == 10)
{
- double v = 0;
-
- while (1)
- {
- int digit = digit_to_number (*p++, b);
- if (digit < 0)
- break;
- v = v * b + digit;
- }
-
- val = make_fixnum_or_float (sign * v);
+ Lisp_Object val = string_to_float (p, 1);
+ if (FLOATP (val))
+ return val;
}
- return val;
+ n = strtol (p, NULL, b);
+ if (FIXNUM_OVERFLOW_P (n))
+ xsignal (Qoverflow_error, list1 (string));
+ return make_number (n);
}
\f
if (!quoted && !uninterned_symbol)
{
register char *p1;
+ Lisp_Object result;
p1 = read_buffer;
if (*p1 == '+' || *p1 == '-') p1++;
/* Is it an integer? */
- if (p1 != p)
+ if ('0' <= *p1 && *p1 <= '9')
{
- while (p1 != p && (c = *p1) >= '0' && c <= '9') p1++;
+ do
+ p1++;
+ while ('0' <= *p1 && *p1 <= '9');
+
/* Integers can have trailing decimal points. */
- if (p1 > read_buffer && p1 < p && *p1 == '.') p1++;
+ p1 += (*p1 == '.');
if (p1 == p)
- /* It is an integer. */
{
- if (p1[-1] == '.')
- p1[-1] = '\0';
- {
- /* EMACS_INT n = atol (read_buffer); */
- char *endptr = NULL;
- EMACS_INT n = (errno = 0,
- strtol (read_buffer, &endptr, 10));
- if (errno == ERANGE && endptr)
- {
- Lisp_Object args
- = Fcons (make_string (read_buffer,
- endptr - read_buffer),
- Qnil);
- xsignal (Qoverflow_error, args);
- }
- return make_fixnum_or_float (n);
- }
+ /* It is an integer. */
+ EMACS_INT n = strtol (read_buffer, NULL, 10);
+ if (FIXNUM_OVERFLOW_P (n))
+ xsignal (Qoverflow_error,
+ list1 (build_string (read_buffer)));
+ return make_number (n);
}
}
- if (isfloat_string (read_buffer, 0))
- {
- /* Compute NaN and infinities using 0.0 in a variable,
- to cope with compilers that think they are smarter
- than we are. */
- double zero = 0.0;
-
- double value;
-
- /* Negate the value ourselves. This treats 0, NaNs,
- and infinity properly on IEEE floating point hosts,
- and works around a common bug where atof ("-0.0")
- drops the sign. */
- int negative = read_buffer[0] == '-';
-
- /* The only way p[-1] can be 'F' or 'N', after isfloat_string
- returns 1, is if the input ends in e+INF or e+NaN. */
- switch (p[-1])
- {
- case 'F':
- value = 1.0 / zero;
- break;
- case 'N':
- value = zero / zero;
- /* If that made a "negative" NaN, negate it. */
-
- {
- int i;
- union { double d; char c[sizeof (double)]; } u_data, u_minus_zero;
-
- u_data.d = value;
- u_minus_zero.d = - 0.0;
- for (i = 0; i < sizeof (double); i++)
- if (u_data.c[i] & u_minus_zero.c[i])
- {
- value = - value;
- break;
- }
- }
- /* Now VALUE is a positive NaN. */
- break;
- default:
- value = atof (read_buffer + negative);
- break;
- }
-
- return make_float (negative ? - value : value);
- }
+ result = string_to_float (read_buffer, 0);
+ if (FLOATP (result))
+ return result;
}
{
Lisp_Object name, result;
}
\f
+/* Return the length of the floating-point number that is the prefix of CP, or
+ zero if there is none. */
+
#define LEAD_INT 1
#define DOT_CHAR 2
#define TRAIL_INT 4
#define E_CHAR 8
#define EXP_INT 16
-int
-isfloat_string (const char *cp, int ignore_trailing)
+
+/* Convert CP to a floating point number. Return a non-float value if CP does
+ not have valid floating point syntax. If IGNORE_TRAILING is nonzero,
+ consider just the longest prefix of CP that has valid floating point
+ syntax. */
+
+Lisp_Object
+string_to_float (char const *cp, int ignore_trailing)
{
int state;
const char *start = cp;
+ /* Compute NaN and infinities using a variable, to cope with compilers that
+ think they are smarter than we are. */
+ double zero = 0;
+
+ /* Negate the value ourselves. This treats 0, NaNs, and infinity properly on
+ IEEE floating point hosts, and works around a formerly-common bug where
+ atof ("-0.0") drops the sign. */
+ int negative = *cp == '-';
+
+ double value = 0;
+
state = 0;
- if (*cp == '+' || *cp == '-')
+ if (negative || *cp == '+')
cp++;
if (*cp >= '0' && *cp <= '9')
{
state |= EXP_INT;
cp += 3;
+ value = 1.0 / zero;
}
else if (cp[-1] == '+' && cp[0] == 'N' && cp[1] == 'a' && cp[2] == 'N')
{
state |= EXP_INT;
cp += 3;
+ value = zero / zero;
+
+ /* If that made a "negative" NaN, negate it. */
+ {
+ int i;
+ union { double d; char c[sizeof (double)]; } u_data, u_minus_zero;
+
+ u_data.d = value;
+ u_minus_zero.d = - 0.0;
+ for (i = 0; i < sizeof (double); i++)
+ if (u_data.c[i] & u_minus_zero.c[i])
+ {
+ value = - value;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ /* Now VALUE is a positive NaN. */
}
- return ((ignore_trailing
- || *cp == 0 || *cp == ' ' || *cp == '\t' || *cp == '\n'
- || *cp == '\r' || *cp == '\f')
- && (state == (LEAD_INT|DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT)
- || state == (DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT)
- || state == (LEAD_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)
- || state == (LEAD_INT|DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)
- || state == (DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)));
+ if (! (state == (LEAD_INT|DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT)
+ || state == (DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT)
+ || state == (LEAD_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)
+ || state == (LEAD_INT|DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)
+ || state == (DOT_CHAR|TRAIL_INT|E_CHAR|EXP_INT)))
+ return make_number (0); /* Any non-float value will do. */
+
+ if (! value)
+ value = atof (start + negative);
+ if (negative)
+ value = - value;
+ return make_float (value);
}
\f