From: sto.mar@... Date: 2017-02-24T23:28:48+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:79760] [Ruby trunk Feature#13219] bug in Math.sqrt(n).to_i, to compute integer squareroot, new word to accurately fix it Issue #13219 has been updated by Marcus Stollsteimer. Jabari Zakiya wrote: > I noticed in the other squareroot methods they raise an error for ``n < 0`` > whereas my version returns 'nil' when taking an even root of a negative integer. I strongly agree with nobu's implementation. That's exactly the behavior I was about to suggest when I noticed it was already there. > The reason I chose to return 'nil' is because in some applications where I'm > processing lots of data I don't want the program to bomb when encountering > negative integers, I want to continue and just choose how to process those conditions. It doesn't have to bomb. 1. for typical use cases (number theory, etc.) you will have only positive values anyway 2. you can check your data before using the method 3. you can use a begin...rescue block and handle the exception appropriately Returning `nil` for a mathematical operation doesn't make much sense. And a silent failure you are not aware of will bite you much more than an exception. > First, mathematically it is perfectly allowable to take the even root of a negative number, > it's just a complex number, so conceptually this shouldn't be an error, just unwanted for this method. "Not an error, but unwanted"??? The point is that by premise the method doesn't make _any_ sense in the complex domain. It's supposed to return the largest integer (natural number) less or equal to the square root. This wouldn't work for complex numbers at all: how would you truncate to an integer? how would you do the comparison? (Complex numbers are not ordered.) Therefore, isqrt only does make sense for natural numbers. (Different from the "normal" sqrt.) ---------------------------------------- Feature #13219: bug in Math.sqrt(n).to_i, to compute integer squareroot, new word to accurately fix it https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13219#change-63187 * Author: Jabari Zakiya * Status: Closed * Priority: Normal * Assignee: * Target version: ---------------------------------------- In doing a math application using **Math.sqrt(n).to_i** to compute integer squareroots of integers I started noticing errors for numbers > 10**28. I coded an algorithm that accurately computes the integer squareroot for arbirary sized numbers but its significantly slower than the math library written in C. Thus, I request a new method **Math.intsqrt(n)** be created, that is coded in C and part of the core library, that will compute the integer squareroots of integers accurately and fast. Here is working highlevel code to accurately compute the integer squareroot. ``` def intsqrt(n) bits_shift = (n.to_s(2).size)/2 + 1 bitn_mask = root = 1 << bits_shift while true root ^= bitn_mask if (root * root) > n bitn_mask >>= 1 return root if bitn_mask == 0 root |= bitn_mask end end def intsqrt1(n) return n if n | 1 == 1 # if n is 0 or 1 bits_shift = (Math.log2(n).ceil)/2 + 1 bitn_mask = root = 1 << bits_shift while true root ^= bitn_mask if (root * root) > n bitn_mask >>= 1 return root if bitn_mask == 0 root |= bitn_mask end end require "benchmark/ips" Benchmark.ips do |x| n = 10**40 puts "integer squareroot tests for n = #{n}" x.report("intsqrt(n)" ) { intsqrt(n) } x.report("intsqrt1(n)" ) { intsqrt1(n) } x.report("Math.sqrt(n).to_i") { Math.sqrt(n).to_i } x.compare! end ``` Here's why it needs to be done in C. ``` 2.4.0 :178 > load 'intsqrttest.rb' integer squareroot tests for n = 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Warming up -------------------------------------- intsqrt(n) 5.318k i/100ms intsqrt1(n) 5.445k i/100ms Math.sqrt(n).to_i 268.281k i/100ms Calculating ------------------------------------- intsqrt(n) 54.219k (�� 5.5%) i/s - 271.218k in 5.017552s intsqrt1(n) 55.872k (�� 5.4%) i/s - 283.140k in 5.082953s Math.sqrt(n).to_i 5.278M (�� 6.1%) i/s - 26.560M in 5.050707s Comparison: Math.sqrt(n).to_i: 5278477.8 i/s intsqrt1(n): 55871.7 i/s - 94.47x slower intsqrt(n): 54219.4 i/s - 97.35x slower => true 2.4.0 :179 > ``` Here are examples of math errors using **Math.sqrt(n).to_i** run on Ruby-2.4.0. ``` 2.4.0 :101 > n = 10**27; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 1000000000000000000000000000 31622776601683 999999999999949826038432489 31622776601683 999999999999949826038432489 31622776601683 999999999999949826038432489 => nil 2.4.0 :102 > n = 10**28; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 10000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000 => nil 2.4.0 :103 > n = 10**29; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 100000000000000000000000000000 316227766016837 99999999999999409792567484569 316227766016837 99999999999999409792567484569 316227766016837 99999999999999409792567484569 => nil 2.4.0 :104 > n = 10**30; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 1000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000 => nil 2.4.0 :105 > n = 10**31; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 10000000000000000000000000000000 3162277660168379 9999999999999997900254631487641 3162277660168379 9999999999999997900254631487641 3162277660168379 9999999999999997900254631487641 => nil 2.4.0 :106 > n = 10**32; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 100000000000000000000000000000000 10000000000000000 100000000000000000000000000000000 10000000000000000 100000000000000000000000000000000 10000000000000000 100000000000000000000000000000000 => nil 2.4.0 :107 > n = 10**33; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 1000000000000000000000000000000000 31622776601683793 999999999999999979762122758866849 31622776601683793 999999999999999979762122758866849 31622776601683792 999999999999999916516569555499264 => nil 2.4.0 :108 > n = 10**34; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 10000000000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000000000 100000000000000000 10000000000000000000000000000000000 => nil 2.4.0 :109 > n = 10**35; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 100000000000000000000000000000000000 316227766016837933 99999999999999999873578871987712489 316227766016837933 99999999999999999873578871987712489 316227766016837952 100000000000000011890233980627554304 => nil 2.4.0 :110 > n = 10**36; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 1000000000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000000000 1000000000000000000 1000000000000000000000000000000000000 => nil 2.4.0 :111 > n = 10**37; puts n, (a = intsqrt(n)), a*a, (b = intsqrt1(n)), b*b, (c = Math.sqrt(n).to_i), c*c 10000000000000000000000000000000000000 3162277660168379331 9999999999999999993682442519108007561 3162277660168379331 9999999999999999993682442519108007561 3162277660168379392 10000000000000000379480317059650289664 => nil 2.4.0 :112 > ``` -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: