Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view src/video/e_log.h @ 1550:31c2b8e4885e
Fixed bug #166
From the autoconf obsolete macros documentation:
Macro: AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM
Determine the system type and set output variables to the names of the canonical system types. See section Getting the Canonical System Type, for details about the variables this macro sets.
The user is encouraged to use either AC_CANONICAL_BUILD, or AC_CANONICAL_HOST, or AC_CANONICAL_TARGET, depending on the needs. Using AC_CANONICAL_TARGET is enough to run the two other macros.
From the documentation for the canonical environments:
case $target in
i386-*-mach* | i386-*-gnu*)
obj_format=aout emulation=mach bfd_gas=yes ;;
i960-*-bout) obj_format=bout ;;
esac
Note that the above example uses $target because it's taken from a tool which can be built on some architecture ($build), run on another ($host), but yet handle data for a third architecture ($target). Such tools are usually part of a compiler suite, they generate code for a specific $target.
However $target should be meaningless for most packages. If you want to base a decision on the system where your program will be run, make sure you use the $host variable.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 19 Mar 2006 05:27:22 +0000 |
parents | 450721ad5436 |
children | 782fd950bd46 c121d94672cb |
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/* @(#)e_log.c 5.1 93/09/24 */ /* * ==================================================== * Copyright (C) 1993 by Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * * Developed at SunPro, a Sun Microsystems, Inc. business. * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this * software is freely granted, provided that this notice * is preserved. * ==================================================== */ #if defined(LIBM_SCCS) && !defined(lint) static char rcsid[] = "$NetBSD: e_log.c,v 1.8 1995/05/10 20:45:49 jtc Exp $"; #endif /* __ieee754_log(x) * Return the logrithm of x * * Method : * 1. Argument Reduction: find k and f such that * x = 2^k * (1+f), * where sqrt(2)/2 < 1+f < sqrt(2) . * * 2. Approximation of log(1+f). * Let s = f/(2+f) ; based on log(1+f) = log(1+s) - log(1-s) * = 2s + 2/3 s**3 + 2/5 s**5 + ....., * = 2s + s*R * We use a special Reme algorithm on [0,0.1716] to generate * a polynomial of degree 14 to approximate R The maximum error * of this polynomial approximation is bounded by 2**-58.45. In * other words, * 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 * R(z) ~ Lg1*s +Lg2*s +Lg3*s +Lg4*s +Lg5*s +Lg6*s +Lg7*s * (the values of Lg1 to Lg7 are listed in the program) * and * | 2 14 | -58.45 * | Lg1*s +...+Lg7*s - R(z) | <= 2 * | | * Note that 2s = f - s*f = f - hfsq + s*hfsq, where hfsq = f*f/2. * In order to guarantee error in log below 1ulp, we compute log * by * log(1+f) = f - s*(f - R) (if f is not too large) * log(1+f) = f - (hfsq - s*(hfsq+R)). (better accuracy) * * 3. Finally, log(x) = k*ln2 + log(1+f). * = k*ln2_hi+(f-(hfsq-(s*(hfsq+R)+k*ln2_lo))) * Here ln2 is split into two floating point number: * ln2_hi + ln2_lo, * where n*ln2_hi is always exact for |n| < 2000. * * Special cases: * log(x) is NaN with signal if x < 0 (including -INF) ; * log(+INF) is +INF; log(0) is -INF with signal; * log(NaN) is that NaN with no signal. * * Accuracy: * according to an error analysis, the error is always less than * 1 ulp (unit in the last place). * * Constants: * The hexadecimal values are the intended ones for the following * constants. The decimal values may be used, provided that the * compiler will convert from decimal to binary accurately enough * to produce the hexadecimal values shown. */ /*#include "math.h"*/ #include "math_private.h" #ifdef __STDC__ static const double #else static double #endif ln2_hi = 6.93147180369123816490e-01, /* 3fe62e42 fee00000 */ ln2_lo = 1.90821492927058770002e-10, /* 3dea39ef 35793c76 */ Lg1 = 6.666666666666735130e-01, /* 3FE55555 55555593 */ Lg2 = 3.999999999940941908e-01, /* 3FD99999 9997FA04 */ Lg3 = 2.857142874366239149e-01, /* 3FD24924 94229359 */ Lg4 = 2.222219843214978396e-01, /* 3FCC71C5 1D8E78AF */ Lg5 = 1.818357216161805012e-01, /* 3FC74664 96CB03DE */ Lg6 = 1.531383769920937332e-01, /* 3FC39A09 D078C69F */ Lg7 = 1.479819860511658591e-01; /* 3FC2F112 DF3E5244 */ #ifdef __STDC__ double __ieee754_log(double x) #else double __ieee754_log(x) double x; #endif { double hfsq,f,s,z,R,w,t1,t2,dk; int32_t k,hx,i,j; u_int32_t lx; EXTRACT_WORDS(hx,lx,x); k=0; if (hx < 0x00100000) { /* x < 2**-1022 */ if (((hx&0x7fffffff)|lx)==0) return -two54/zero; /* log(+-0)=-inf */ if (hx<0) return (x-x)/zero; /* log(-#) = NaN */ k -= 54; x *= two54; /* subnormal number, scale up x */ GET_HIGH_WORD(hx,x); } if (hx >= 0x7ff00000) return x+x; k += (hx>>20)-1023; hx &= 0x000fffff; i = (hx+0x95f64)&0x100000; SET_HIGH_WORD(x,hx|(i^0x3ff00000)); /* normalize x or x/2 */ k += (i>>20); f = x-1.0; if((0x000fffff&(2+hx))<3) { /* |f| < 2**-20 */ if(f==zero) {if(k==0) return zero; else {dk=(double)k; return dk*ln2_hi+dk*ln2_lo;} } R = f*f*(0.5-0.33333333333333333*f); if(k==0) return f-R; else {dk=(double)k; return dk*ln2_hi-((R-dk*ln2_lo)-f);} } s = f/(2.0+f); dk = (double)k; z = s*s; i = hx-0x6147a; w = z*z; j = 0x6b851-hx; t1= w*(Lg2+w*(Lg4+w*Lg6)); t2= z*(Lg1+w*(Lg3+w*(Lg5+w*Lg7))); i |= j; R = t2+t1; if(i>0) { hfsq=0.5*f*f; if(k==0) return f-(hfsq-s*(hfsq+R)); else return dk*ln2_hi-((hfsq-(s*(hfsq+R)+dk*ln2_lo))-f); } else { if(k==0) return f-s*(f-R); else return dk*ln2_hi-((s*(f-R)-dk*ln2_lo)-f); } }