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* [musl] Special cases in csinh and ctanh
@ 2024-08-06 14:02 Damian McGuckin
  2024-08-06 15:46 ` Markus Wichmann
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Damian McGuckin @ 2024-08-06 14:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: MUSL


Some special cases in ctanh.c are listed below:

 	/*
 	 * ctanh(+-0 + i NAN) = +-0 + i NaN
 	 * ctanh(+-0 +- i Inf) = +-0 + i NaN
 	 * ctanh(x + i NAN) = NaN + i NaN
 	 * ctanh(x +- i Inf) = NaN + i NaN
 	 */
 	if (!isfinite(y))
 		return CMPLX(x ? y - y : x, y - y);

What I thought are the same special cases in csinh.c are listed below:
They are processed differently in csinh than in ctanh.

 	/*
 	 * sinh(+-0 +- I Inf) = sign(d(+-0, dNaN))0 + I dNaN.
 	 * The sign of 0 in the result is unspecified.  Choice = normally
 	 * the same as dNaN.  Raise the invalid floating-point exception.
 	 *
 	 * sinh(+-0 +- I NaN) = sign(d(+-0, NaN))0 + I d(NaN).
 	 * The sign of 0 in the result is unspecified.  Choice = normally
 	 * the same as d(NaN).
 	 */
 	if ((ix | lx) == 0 && iy >= 0x7ff00000)
 		return CMPLX(copysign(0, x * (y - y)), y - y);

 	/*
 	 * sinh(x +- I Inf) = dNaN + I dNaN.
 	 * Raise the invalid floating-point exception for finite nonzero x.
 	 *
 	 * sinh(x + I NaN) = d(NaN) + I d(NaN).
 	 * Optionally raises the invalid floating-point exception for finite
 	 * nonzero x.  Choice = don't raise (except for signaling NaNs).
 	 */
 	if (ix < 0x7ff00000 && iy >= 0x7ff00000)
 		return CMPLX(y - y, x * (y - y));

I realise that 'y - y' creates a NaN when y is either an Infinity or NaN.
Won't that also raise an INVALID exception?

What does

 	x * (y - y)

achieve that y - y does not (in the above)

Thanks - Damian

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [musl] Special cases in csinh and ctanh
  2024-08-06 14:02 [musl] Special cases in csinh and ctanh Damian McGuckin
@ 2024-08-06 15:46 ` Markus Wichmann
  2024-08-07  0:51   ` Damian McGuckin
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Markus Wichmann @ 2024-08-06 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: musl; +Cc: Damian McGuckin

Am Wed, Aug 07, 2024 at 12:02:59AM +1000 schrieb Damian McGuckin:
> I realise that 'y - y' creates a NaN when y is either an Infinity or NaN.
> Won't that also raise an INVALID exception?
>

Yes it will. As it should, since it calculates a new NaN where there
wasn't one before (and, one layer up, csinh(0 + ∞ i) IS an invalid
operation). y - y does NOT raise invalid if y already is QNaN.

> What does
>
> 	x * (y - y)
>
> achieve that y - y does not (in the above)
>

The version in ctanh() sets the real part to 0 if x is zero, while the
above always calculates NaN if y is not finite. Otherwise, the sign bit
may be different, whatever information the sign bit of a NaN has.

Ciao,
Markus

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [musl] Special cases in csinh and ctanh
  2024-08-06 15:46 ` Markus Wichmann
@ 2024-08-07  0:51   ` Damian McGuckin
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Damian McGuckin @ 2024-08-07  0:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Markus Wichmann; +Cc: musl

On Tue, 6 Aug 2024, Markus Wichmann wrote:

> Am Wed, Aug 07, 2024 at 12:02:59AM +1000 schrieb Damian McGuckin:
>> I realise that 'y - y' creates a NaN when y is either an Infinity or NaN.
>> Won't that also raise an INVALID exception?
>>
>
> Yes it will.

That is what I assumed.

> As it should, since it calculates a new NaN where there
> wasn't one before (and, one layer up, csinh(0 + ? i) IS an invalid
> operation). y - y does NOT raise invalid if y already is QNaN.

That is what I assumed.

>> What does
>>
>> 	x * (y - y)
>>
>> achieve that y - y does not (in the above)
>
> The version in ctanh() sets the real part to 0 if x is zero, while the
> above always calculates NaN if y is not finite. Otherwise, the sign bit
> may be different, whatever information the sign bit of a NaN has.

Sorry, I was not clear enough.

Looking at the case where 'x' Is zero. It is effectively

ctanh:

   return CMPLX(x, y - y);

or

   return CMPLX(+0, qNaN); // if x is +0 && y == an infinity + raise INVALID
   return CMPLX(+0, qNaN); // if x is +0 && y == qNaN
   return CMPLX(-0, qNaN); // if x is -0 && y == an infinity + raise INVALID
   return CMPLX(-0, qNaN); // if x is -0 && y == qNaN

This is what I expect. It agrees with the standard. But

csinh:

   return CMPLX(copysign(0, x * (y - y), y - y);

or

   return CMPLX(??0, qNaN); // if y == an infinity + raise INVALID
   return CMPLX(??0, qNaN); // if y == qNaN

I put a double question mark in front of 0 because if I have no idea to 
what sign the expression x*(y-y) will evaluate.

I cannot see what all the extra effort buys because you end up with sort
of the same result. Actually the second result potentially could have the
a sign for the real part which violates the standard.

Similarly, for x non-zero, you get

ctanh:

   return CMPLX(y - y, y - y);

or

   return CMPLX(qNaN, qNAN); // if y is an infinity + raise INVALID
   return CMPLX(qNaN, qNAN); // if y is a qNAN

csinh:

   return CMPLX(y - y, x * (y - y));

or

   return CMPLX(qNaN, qNAN); // if y is an infinity + raise INVALID
   return CMPLX(qNaN, qNAN); // if y is a qNAN

Again, what does the multiplication get you except more complexity. I 
cannot see the reason using a multiplication for it. Or am I missing 
something because my brain is too busy watching the Olympics?

Thanks again - Damian

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2024-08-07  0:51 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 3+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
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2024-08-06 14:02 [musl] Special cases in csinh and ctanh Damian McGuckin
2024-08-06 15:46 ` Markus Wichmann
2024-08-07  0:51   ` Damian McGuckin

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