use core::f32; #[cfg_attr(all(test, assert_no_panic), no_panic::no_panic)] pub fn truncf(x: f32) -> f32 { // On wasm32 we know that LLVM's intrinsic will compile to an optimized // `f32.trunc` native instruction, so we can leverage this for both code size // and speed. llvm_intrinsically_optimized! { #[cfg(target_arch = "wasm32")] { return unsafe { ::core::intrinsics::truncf32(x) } } } let x1p120 = f32::from_bits(0x7b800000); // 0x1p120f === 2 ^ 120 let mut i: u32 = x.to_bits(); let mut e: i32 = (i >> 23 & 0xff) as i32 - 0x7f + 9; let m: u32; if e >= 23 + 9 { return x; } if e < 9 { e = 1; } m = -1i32 as u32 >> e; if (i & m) == 0 { return x; } force_eval!(x + x1p120); i &= !m; f32::from_bits(i) } // PowerPC tests are failing on LLVM 13: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88520 #[cfg(not(target_arch = "powerpc64"))] #[cfg(test)] mod tests { #[test] fn sanity_check() { assert_eq!(super::truncf(1.1), 1.0); } }