/* strtod.c - convert string to double-precision floating-point value. */ /* Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell. Bash is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Bash is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Bash. If not, see . */ #if HAVE_CONFIG_H # include #endif #ifndef HAVE_STRTOD #include #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif #include #include #if HAVE_FLOAT_H # include #else # define DBL_MAX 1.7976931348623159e+308 # define DBL_MIN 2.2250738585072010e-308 #endif #include #ifndef NULL # define NULL 0 #endif #ifndef HUGE_VAL # define HUGE_VAL HUGE #endif #ifndef locale_decpoint extern int locale_decpoint PARAMS((void)); #endif /* Convert NPTR to a double. If ENDPTR is not NULL, a pointer to the character after the last one used in the number is put in *ENDPTR. */ double strtod (nptr, endptr) const char *nptr; char **endptr; { register const char *s; short sign; /* The number so far. */ double num; int radixchar; int got_dot; /* Found a decimal point. */ int got_digit; /* Seen any digits. */ /* The exponent of the number. */ long int exponent; if (nptr == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; goto noconv; } s = nptr; /* Eat whitespace. */ while (ISSPACE ((unsigned char)*s)) ++s; /* Get the sign. */ sign = *s == '-' ? -1 : 1; if (*s == '-' || *s == '+') ++s; radixchar = locale_decpoint (); num = 0.0; got_dot = 0; got_digit = 0; exponent = 0; for (;; ++s) { if (DIGIT (*s)) { got_digit = 1; /* Make sure that multiplication by 10 will not overflow. */ if (num > DBL_MAX * 0.1) /* The value of the digit doesn't matter, since we have already gotten as many digits as can be represented in a `double'. This doesn't necessarily mean the result will overflow. The exponent may reduce it to within range. We just need to record that there was another digit so that we can multiply by 10 later. */ ++exponent; else num = (num * 10.0) + (*s - '0'); /* Keep track of the number of digits after the decimal point. If we just divided by 10 here, we would lose precision. */ if (got_dot) --exponent; } else if (!got_dot && *s == radixchar) /* Record that we have found the decimal point. */ got_dot = 1; else /* Any other character terminates the number. */ break; } if (!got_digit) goto noconv; if (TOLOWER ((unsigned char)*s) == 'e') { /* Get the exponent specified after the `e' or `E'. */ int save = errno; char *end; long int exp; errno = 0; ++s; exp = strtol (s, &end, 10); if (errno == ERANGE) { /* The exponent overflowed a `long int'. It is probably a safe assumption that an exponent that cannot be represented by a `long int' exceeds the limits of a `double'. */ if (endptr != NULL) *endptr = end; if (exp < 0) goto underflow; else goto overflow; } else if (end == s) /* There was no exponent. Reset END to point to the 'e' or 'E', so *ENDPTR will be set there. */ end = (char *) s - 1; errno = save; s = end; exponent += exp; } if (endptr != NULL) *endptr = (char *) s; if (num == 0.0) return 0.0; /* Multiply NUM by 10 to the EXPONENT power, checking for overflow and underflow. */ if (exponent < 0) { if (num < DBL_MIN * pow (10.0, (double) -exponent)) goto underflow; } else if (exponent > 0) { if (num > DBL_MAX * pow (10.0, (double) -exponent)) goto overflow; } num *= pow (10.0, (double) exponent); return num * sign; overflow: /* Return an overflow error. */ errno = ERANGE; return HUGE_VAL * sign; underflow: /* Return an underflow error. */ if (endptr != NULL) *endptr = (char *) nptr; errno = ERANGE; return 0.0; noconv: /* There was no number. */ if (endptr != NULL) *endptr = (char *) nptr; return 0.0; } #endif /* !HAVE_STRTOD */