newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/stdlib/ecvtbuf.c

438 lines
8.3 KiB
C

/*
FUNCTION
<<ecvtbuf>>, <<fcvtbuf>>---double or float to string
INDEX
ecvtbuf
INDEX
fcvtbuf
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
char *ecvtbuf(double <[val]>, int <[chars]>, int *<[decpt]>,
int *<[sgn]>, char *<[buf]>);
char *fcvtbuf(double <[val]>, int <[decimals]>, int *<[decpt]>,
int *<[sgn]>, char *<[buf]>);
DESCRIPTION
<<ecvtbuf>> and <<fcvtbuf>> produce (null-terminated) strings
of digits representating the <<double>> number <[val]>.
The only difference between <<ecvtbuf>> and <<fcvtbuf>> is the
interpretation of the second argument (<[chars]> or
<[decimals]>). For <<ecvtbuf>>, the second argument <[chars]>
specifies the total number of characters to write (which is
also the number of significant digits in the formatted string,
since these two functions write only digits). For <<fcvtbuf>>,
the second argument <[decimals]> specifies the number of
characters to write after the decimal point; all digits for
the integer part of <[val]> are always included.
Since <<ecvtbuf>> and <<fcvtbuf>> write only digits in the
output string, they record the location of the decimal point
in <<*<[decpt]>>>, and the sign of the number in <<*<[sgn]>>>.
After formatting a number, <<*<[decpt]>>> contains the number
of digits to the left of the decimal point. <<*<[sgn]>>>
contains <<0>> if the number is positive, and <<1>> if it is
negative. For both functions, you supply a pointer <[buf]> to
an area of memory to hold the converted string.
RETURNS
Both functions return a pointer to <[buf]>, the string
containing a character representation of <[val]>.
PORTABILITY
Neither function is ANSI C.
Supporting OS subroutines required: <<close>>, <<fstat>>, <<isatty>>,
<<lseek>>, <<read>>, <<sbrk>>, <<write>>.
*/
#include <_ansi.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <reent.h>
#include "mprec.h"
#include "local.h"
static void
print_f (struct _reent *ptr,
char *buf,
double invalue,
int ndigit,
char type,
int dot,
int mode)
{
int decpt;
int sign;
char *p, *start, *end;
start = p = _dtoa_r (ptr, invalue, mode, ndigit, &decpt, &sign, &end);
if (decpt == 9999)
{
strcpy (buf, p);
return;
}
while (*p && decpt > 0)
{
*buf++ = *p++;
decpt--;
}
/* Even if not in buffer */
while (decpt > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
decpt--;
}
if (dot || *p)
{
if (p == start)
*buf++ = '0';
*buf++ = '.';
while (decpt < 0 && ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
decpt++;
ndigit--;
}
/* Print rest of stuff */
while (*p && ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = *p++;
ndigit--;
}
/* And trailing zeros */
while (ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
ndigit--;
}
}
*buf++ = 0;
}
/* Print number in e format with width chars after.
TYPE is one of 'e' or 'E'. It may also be one of 'g' or 'G' indicating
that _gcvt is calling us and we should remove trailing zeroes.
WIDTH is the number of digits of precision after the decimal point. */
static void
print_e (struct _reent *ptr,
char *buf,
double invalue,
int width,
char type,
int dot)
{
int sign;
char *end;
char *p;
int decpt;
int top;
int ndigit = width;
p = _dtoa_r (ptr, invalue, 2, width + 1, &decpt, &sign, &end);
if (decpt == 9999)
{
strcpy (buf, p);
return;
}
*buf++ = *p++;
if (dot || ndigit != 0)
*buf++ = '.';
while (*p && ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = *p++;
ndigit--;
}
/* Add trailing zeroes to fill out to ndigits unless this is 'g' format.
Also, convert g/G to e/E. */
if (type == 'g')
type = 'e';
else if (type == 'G')
type = 'E';
else
{
while (ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
ndigit--;
}
}
/* Add the exponent. */
*buf++ = type;
decpt--;
if (decpt < 0)
{
*buf++ = '-';
decpt = -decpt;
}
else
{
*buf++ = '+';
}
if (decpt > 99)
{
int top = decpt / 100;
*buf++ = top + '0';
decpt -= top * 100;
}
top = decpt / 10;
*buf++ = top + '0';
decpt -= top * 10;
*buf++ = decpt + '0';
*buf++ = 0;
}
#ifndef _REENT_ONLY
/* Undocumented behaviour: when given NULL as a buffer, return a
pointer to static space in the rent structure. This is only to
support ecvt and fcvt, which aren't ANSI anyway. */
char *
fcvtbuf (double invalue,
int ndigit,
int *decpt,
int *sign,
char *fcvt_buf)
{
struct _reent *reent = _REENT;
char *save;
char *p;
char *end;
int done = 0;
if (fcvt_buf == NULL)
{
if (reent->_cvtlen <= ndigit + 35)
{
if ((fcvt_buf = (char *) _realloc_r (reent, reent->_cvtbuf,
ndigit + 36)) == NULL)
return NULL;
reent->_cvtlen = ndigit + 36;
reent->_cvtbuf = fcvt_buf;
}
fcvt_buf = reent->_cvtbuf ;
}
save = fcvt_buf;
p = _dtoa_r (reent, invalue, 3, ndigit, decpt, sign, &end);
/* Now copy */
done = -*decpt;
while (p < end)
{
*fcvt_buf++ = *p++;
done++;
}
/* And unsuppress the trailing zeroes */
while (done < ndigit)
{
*fcvt_buf++ = '0';
done++;
}
*fcvt_buf++ = 0;
return save;
}
char *
ecvtbuf (double invalue,
int ndigit,
int *decpt,
int *sign,
char *fcvt_buf)
{
struct _reent *reent = _REENT;
char *save;
char *p;
char *end;
int done = 0;
if (fcvt_buf == NULL)
{
if (reent->_cvtlen <= ndigit)
{
if ((fcvt_buf = (char *) _realloc_r (reent, reent->_cvtbuf,
ndigit + 1)) == NULL)
return NULL;
reent->_cvtlen = ndigit + 1;
reent->_cvtbuf = fcvt_buf;
}
fcvt_buf = reent->_cvtbuf ;
}
save = fcvt_buf;
p = _dtoa_r (reent, invalue, 2, ndigit, decpt, sign, &end);
/* Now copy */
while (p < end)
{
*fcvt_buf++ = *p++;
done++;
}
/* And unsuppress the trailing zeroes */
while (done < ndigit)
{
*fcvt_buf++ = '0';
done++;
}
*fcvt_buf++ = 0;
return save;
}
#endif
char *
_gcvt (struct _reent *ptr,
double invalue,
int ndigit,
char *buf,
char type,
int dot)
{
char *save = buf;
if (invalue < 0)
{
invalue = -invalue;
}
if (invalue == 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
*buf = '\0';
}
else
/* Which one to print ?
ANSI says that anything with more that 4 zeros after the . or more
than precision digits before is printed in e with the qualification
that trailing zeroes are removed from the fraction portion. */
if (0.0001 >= invalue || invalue >= _mprec_log10 (ndigit))
{
/* We subtract 1 from ndigit because in the 'e' format the precision is
the number of digits after the . but in 'g' format it is the number
of significant digits.
We defer changing type to e/E so that print_e() can know it's us
calling and thus should remove trailing zeroes. */
print_e (ptr, buf, invalue, ndigit - 1, type, dot);
}
else
{
int decpt;
int sign;
char *end;
char *p;
/* We always want ndigits of precision, even if that means printing
* a bunch of leading zeros for numbers < 1.0
*/
p = _dtoa_r (ptr, invalue, 2, ndigit, &decpt, &sign, &end);
if (decpt == 9999)
{
strcpy (buf, p);
return save;
}
while (*p && decpt > 0)
{
*buf++ = *p++;
decpt--;
ndigit--;
}
/* Even if not in buffer */
while (decpt > 0 && ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
decpt--;
ndigit--;
}
if (dot || *p)
{
if (buf == save)
*buf++ = '0';
*buf++ = '.';
/* Leading zeros don't count towards 'ndigit' */
while (decpt < 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
decpt++;
}
/* Print rest of stuff */
while (*p && ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = *p++;
ndigit--;
}
/* And trailing zeros */
if (dot)
{
while (ndigit > 0)
{
*buf++ = '0';
ndigit--;
}
}
}
*buf++ = 0;
}
return save;
}
char *
_dcvt (struct _reent *ptr,
char *buffer,
double invalue,
int precision,
int width,
char type,
int dot)
{
switch (type)
{
case 'f':
case 'F':
print_f (ptr, buffer, invalue, precision, type, precision == 0 ? dot : 1, 3);
break;
case 'g':
case 'G':
if (precision == 0)
precision = 1;
_gcvt (ptr, invalue, precision, buffer, type, dot);
break;
case 'e':
case 'E':
print_e (ptr, buffer, invalue, precision, type, dot);
}
return buffer;
}