xref: /freebsd/contrib/bc/manuals/bcl.3.md (revision 2a58b312)
1<!---
2
3SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
4
5Copyright (c) 2018-2023 Gavin D. Howard and contributors.
6
7Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
9
10* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
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13* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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29-->
30
31# NAME
32
33bcl - library of arbitrary precision decimal arithmetic
34
35# SYNOPSIS
36
37## Use
38
39*#include <bcl.h>*
40
41Link with *-lbcl*, and on POSIX systems, *-lpthread* is also required.
42
43## Setup
44
45These items allow clients to set up bcl(3).
46
47**BclError bcl_start(**_void_**);**
48
49**void bcl_end(**_void_**);**
50
51**BclError bcl_init(**_void_**);**
52
53**void bcl_free(**_void_**);**
54
55**bool bcl_abortOnFatalError(**_void_**);**
56
57**void bcl_setAbortOnFatalError(bool** _abrt_**);**
58
59**bool bcl_leadingZeroes(**_void_**);**
60
61**void bcl_setLeadingZeroes(bool** _leadingZeroes_**);**
62
63**void bcl_gc(**_void_**);**
64
65**bool bcl_digitClamp(**_void_**);**
66
67**void bcl_setDigitClamp(bool** _digitClamp_**);**
68
69## Contexts
70
71These items will allow clients to handle contexts, which are isolated from each
72other. This allows more than one client to use bcl(3) in the same program.
73
74**struct BclCtxt;**
75
76**typedef struct BclCtxt\* BclContext;**
77
78**BclContext bcl_ctxt_create(**_void_**);**
79
80**void bcl_ctxt_free(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
81
82**BclError bcl_pushContext(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
83
84**void bcl_popContext(**_void_**);**
85
86**BclContext bcl_context(**_void_**);**
87
88**void bcl_ctxt_freeNums(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
89
90**size_t bcl_ctxt_scale(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
91
92**void bcl_ctxt_setScale(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _scale_**);**
93
94**size_t bcl_ctxt_ibase(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
95
96**void bcl_ctxt_setIbase(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _ibase_**);**
97
98**size_t bcl_ctxt_obase(BclContext** _ctxt_**);**
99
100**void bcl_ctxt_setObase(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _obase_**);**
101
102## Errors
103
104These items allow clients to handle errors.
105
106**typedef enum BclError BclError;**
107
108**BclError bcl_err(BclNumber** _n_**);**
109
110## Numbers
111
112These items allow clients to manipulate and query the arbitrary-precision
113numbers managed by bcl(3).
114
115**typedef struct { size_t i; } BclNumber;**
116
117**BclNumber bcl_num_create(**_void_**);**
118
119**void bcl_num_free(BclNumber** _n_**);**
120
121**bool bcl_num_neg(BclNumber** _n_**);**
122
123**void bcl_num_setNeg(BclNumber** _n_**, bool** _neg_**);**
124
125**size_t bcl_num_scale(BclNumber** _n_**);**
126
127**BclError bcl_num_setScale(BclNumber** _n_**, size_t** _scale_**);**
128
129**size_t bcl_num_len(BclNumber** _n_**);**
130
131## Conversion
132
133These items allow clients to convert numbers into and from strings and integers.
134
135**BclNumber bcl_parse(const char \*restrict** _val_**);**
136
137**char\* bcl_string(BclNumber** _n_**);**
138
139**char\* bcl_string_keep(BclNumber** _n_**);**
140
141**BclError bcl_bigdig(BclNumber** _n_**, BclBigDig \***_result_**);**
142
143**BclError bcl_bigdig_keep(BclNumber** _n_**, BclBigDig \***_result_**);**
144
145**BclNumber bcl_bigdig2num(BclBigDig** _val_**);**
146
147## Math
148
149These items allow clients to run math on numbers.
150
151**BclNumber bcl_add(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
152
153**BclNumber bcl_add_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
154
155**BclNumber bcl_sub(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
156
157**BclNumber bcl_sub_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
158
159**BclNumber bcl_mul(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
160
161**BclNumber bcl_mul_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
162
163**BclNumber bcl_div(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
164
165**BclNumber bcl_div_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
166
167**BclNumber bcl_mod(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
168
169**BclNumber bcl_mod_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
170
171**BclNumber bcl_pow(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
172
173**BclNumber bcl_pow_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
174
175**BclNumber bcl_lshift(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
176
177**BclNumber bcl_lshift_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
178
179**BclNumber bcl_rshift(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
180
181**BclNumber bcl_rshift_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
182
183**BclNumber bcl_sqrt(BclNumber** _a_**);**
184
185**BclNumber bcl_sqrt_keep(BclNumber** _a_**);**
186
187**BclError bcl_divmod(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber \***_c_**, BclNumber \***_d_**);**
188
189**BclError bcl_divmod_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber \***_c_**, BclNumber \***_d_**);**
190
191**BclNumber bcl_modexp(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber** _c_**);**
192
193**BclNumber bcl_modexp_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber** _c_**);**
194
195## Miscellaneous
196
197These items are miscellaneous.
198
199**void bcl_zero(BclNumber** _n_**);**
200
201**void bcl_one(BclNumber** _n_**);**
202
203**ssize_t bcl_cmp(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**);**
204
205**BclError bcl_copy(BclNumber** _d_**, BclNumber** _s_**);**
206
207**BclNumber bcl_dup(BclNumber** _s_**);**
208
209## Pseudo-Random Number Generator
210
211These items allow clients to manipulate the seeded pseudo-random number
212generator in bcl(3).
213
214**#define BCL_SEED_ULONGS**
215
216**#define BCL_SEED_SIZE**
217
218**typedef unsigned long BclBigDig;**
219
220**typedef unsigned long BclRandInt;**
221
222**BclNumber bcl_irand(BclNumber** _a_**);**
223
224**BclNumber bcl_irand_keep(BclNumber** _a_**);**
225
226**BclNumber bcl_frand(size_t** _places_**);**
227
228**BclNumber bcl_ifrand(BclNumber** _a_**, size_t** _places_**);**
229
230**BclNumber bcl_ifrand_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, size_t** _places_**);**
231
232**BclError bcl_rand_seedWithNum(BclNumber** _n_**);**
233
234**BclError bcl_rand_seedWithNum_keep(BclNumber** _n_**);**
235
236**BclError bcl_rand_seed(unsigned char** _seed_**[**_BCL_SEED_SIZE_**]);**
237
238**void bcl_rand_reseed(**_void_**);**
239
240**BclNumber bcl_rand_seed2num(**_void_**);**
241
242**BclRandInt bcl_rand_int(**_void_**);**
243
244**BclRandInt bcl_rand_bounded(BclRandInt** _bound_**);**
245
246# DESCRIPTION
247
248bcl(3) is a library that implements arbitrary-precision decimal math, as
249standardized by POSIX
250(https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/bc.html) in bc(1).
251
252bcl(3) assumes that it is allowed to use the **bcl**, **Bcl**, **bc**, and
253**Bc** prefixes for symbol names without collision.
254
255All of the items in its interface are described below. See the documentation for
256each function for what each function can return.
257
258## Setup
259
260**BclError bcl_start(**_void_**)**
261
262:   Initializes this library. This function can be called multiple times, but
263    **bcl_end()** must only be called *once*. This is to make it possible for
264    multiple libraries and applications to initialize bcl(3) without problem.
265
266    It is suggested that client libraries call this function, but do not call
267    **bcl_end()**, and client applications should call both.
268
269    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
270    function can return:
271
272    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
273
274    This function must be the first one clients call. Calling any other
275    function without calling this one first is undefined behavior.
276
277**void bcl_end(**_void_**)**
278
279:   Deinitializes this library. This function must only be called *once*.
280
281    All data must have been freed before calling this function.
282
283    This function must be the last one clients call. Calling this function
284    before calling any other function is undefined behavior.
285
286**BclError bcl_init(**_void_**)**
287
288:   Initializes the library for the current thread. This function can be called
289    multiple times, but each call must be matched by a call to
290    **bcl_free(**_void_**)**. This is to make it possible for multiple libraries
291    and applications to initialize threads for bcl(3) without problem.
292
293    This function *must* be called from the thread that it is supposed to
294    initialize.
295
296    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
297    function can return:
298
299    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
300
301    This function must be the second one clients call. Calling any other
302    function without calling **bcl_start()** and then this one first is
303    undefined behavior, except in the case of new threads. New threads can
304    safely call this function without calling **bcl_start()** if another thread
305    has previously called **bcl_start()**. But this function must still be the
306    first function in bcl(3) called by that new thread.
307
308**void bcl_free(**_void_**)**
309
310:   Decrements bcl(3)'s reference count and frees the data associated with it if
311    the reference count is **0**.
312
313    This function *must* be called from the thread that it is supposed to
314    deinitialize.
315
316    This function must be the second to last one clients call. Calling this
317    function before calling any other function besides **bcl_end()** is
318    undefined behavior.
319
320**bool bcl_abortOnFatalError(**_void_**)**
321
322:   Queries and returns the current state of calling **abort()** on fatal
323    errors. If **true** is returned, bcl(3) will cause a **SIGABRT** if a fatal
324    error occurs.
325
326    If activated, clients do not need to check for fatal errors.
327
328    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is read on.
329
330    The default is **false**.
331
332**void bcl_setAbortOnFatalError(bool** _abrt_**)**
333
334:   Sets the state of calling **abort()** on fatal errors. If *abrt* is
335    **false**, bcl(3) will not cause a **SIGABRT** on fatal errors after the
336    call. If *abrt* is **true**, bcl(3) will cause a **SIGABRT** on fatal errors
337    after the call.
338
339    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is set on.
340
341    If activated, clients do not need to check for fatal errors.
342
343**bool bcl_leadingZeroes(**_void_**)**
344
345:   Queries and returns the state of whether leading zeroes are added to strings
346    returned by **bcl_string()** when numbers are greater than **-1**, less than
347    **1**, and not equal to **0**. If **true** is returned, then leading zeroes
348    will be added.
349
350    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is read on.
351
352    The default is **false**.
353
354**void bcl_setLeadingZeroes(bool** _leadingZeroes_**)**
355
356:   Sets the state of whether leading zeroes are added to strings returned by
357    **bcl_string()** when numbers are greater than **-1**, less than **1**, and
358    not equal to **0**. If *leadingZeroes* is **true**, leading zeroes will be
359    added to strings returned by **bcl_string()**.
360
361    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is set on.
362
363**bool bcl_digitClamp(**_void_**)**
364
365:   Queries and returns the state of whether digits in number strings that are
366    greater than or equal to the current **ibase** are clamped or not.
367
368    If **true** is returned, then digits are treated as though they are equal to
369    the value of **ibase** minus **1**. If this is *not* true, then digits are
370    treated as though they are equal to the value they would have if **ibase**
371    was large enough. They are then multiplied by the appropriate power of
372    **ibase**.
373
374    For example, with clamping off and an **ibase** of **3**, the string "AB"
375    would equal **3\^1\*A+3\^0\*B**, which is **3** times **10** plus **11**, or
376    **41**, while with clamping on and an **ibase** of **3**, the string "AB"
377    would be equal to **3\^1\*2+3\^0\*2**, which is **3** times **2** plus
378    **2**, or **8**.
379
380    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is read on.
381
382    The default is **true**.
383
384**void bcl_setDigitClamp(bool** _digitClamp_**)**
385
386:   Sets the state of whether digits in number strings that are greater than or
387    equal to the current **ibase** are clamped or not. For more information, see
388    the **bcl_digitClamp(**_void_**)** function.
389
390    This value is *thread-local*; it applies to just the thread it is set on.
391
392**void bcl_gc(**_void_**)**
393
394:   Garbage collects cached instances of arbitrary-precision numbers. This only
395    frees the memory of numbers that are *not* in use, so it is safe to call at
396    any time.
397
398## Contexts
399
400All procedures that take a **BclContext** parameter a require a valid context as
401an argument.
402
403**struct BclCtxt**
404
405:   A forward declaration for a hidden **struct** type. Clients cannot access
406    the internals of the **struct** type directly. All interactions with the
407    type are done through pointers. See **BclContext** below.
408
409**BclContext**
410
411:   A typedef to a pointer of **struct BclCtxt**. This is the only handle
412    clients can get to **struct BclCtxt**.
413
414    A **BclContext** contains the values **scale**, **ibase**, and **obase**, as
415    well as a list of numbers.
416
417    **scale** is a value used to control how many decimal places calculations
418    should use. A value of **0** means that calculations are done on integers
419    only, where applicable, and a value of 20, for example, means that all
420    applicable calculations return results with 20 decimal places. The default
421    is **0**.
422
423    **ibase** is a value used to control the input base. The minimum **ibase**
424    is **2**, and the maximum is **36**. If **ibase** is **2**, numbers are
425    parsed as though they are in binary, and any digits larger than **1** are
426    clamped. Likewise, a value of **10** means that numbers are parsed as though
427    they are decimal, and any larger digits are clamped. The default is **10**.
428
429    **obase** is a value used to control the output base. The minimum **obase**
430    is **0** and the maximum is **BC_BASE_MAX** (see the **LIMITS** section).
431
432    Numbers created in one context are not valid in another context. It is
433    undefined behavior to use a number created in a different context. Contexts
434    are meant to isolate the numbers used by different clients in the same
435    application.
436
437    Different threads also have different contexts, so any numbers created in
438    one thread are not valid in another thread. To pass values between contexts
439    and threads, use **bcl_string()** to produce a string to pass around, and
440    use **bcl_parse()** to parse the string. It is suggested that the **obase**
441    used to create the string be passed around with the string and used as the
442    **ibase** for **bcl_parse()** to ensure that the number will be the same.
443
444**BclContext bcl_ctxt_create(**_void_**)**
445
446:   Creates a context and returns it. Returns **NULL** if there was an error.
447
448**void bcl_ctxt_free(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
449
450:   Frees *ctxt*, after which it is no longer valid. It is undefined behavior to
451    attempt to use an invalid context.
452
453**BclError bcl_pushContext(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
454
455:   Pushes *ctxt* onto bcl(3)'s stack of contexts. *ctxt* must have been created
456    with **bcl_ctxt_create(**_void_**)**.
457
458    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
459    function can return:
460
461    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
462
463    There *must* be a valid context to do any arithmetic.
464
465**void bcl_popContext(**_void_**)**
466
467:   Pops the current context off of the stack, if one exists.
468
469**BclContext bcl_context(**_void_**)**
470
471:   Returns the current context, or **NULL** if no context exists.
472
473**void bcl_ctxt_freeNums(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
474
475:   Frees all numbers in use that are associated with *ctxt*. It is undefined
476    behavior to attempt to use a number associated with *ctxt* after calling
477    this procedure unless such numbers have been created with
478    **bcl_num_create(**_void_**)** after calling this procedure.
479
480**size_t bcl_ctxt_scale(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
481
482:   Returns the **scale** for given context.
483
484**void bcl_ctxt_setScale(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _scale_**)**
485
486:   Sets the **scale** for the given context to the argument *scale*.
487
488**size_t bcl_ctxt_ibase(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
489
490:   Returns the **ibase** for the given context.
491
492**void bcl_ctxt_setIbase(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _ibase_**)**
493
494:   Sets the **ibase** for the given context to the argument *ibase*. If the
495    argument *ibase* is invalid, it clamped, so an *ibase* of **0** or **1** is
496    clamped to **2**, and any values above **36** are clamped to **36**.
497
498**size_t bcl_ctxt_obase(BclContext** _ctxt_**)**
499
500:   Returns the **obase** for the given context.
501
502**void bcl_ctxt_setObase(BclContext** _ctxt_**, size_t** _obase_**)**
503
504:   Sets the **obase** for the given context to the argument *obase*.
505
506## Errors
507
508**BclError**
509
510:   An **enum** of possible error codes. See the **ERRORS** section for a
511    complete listing the codes.
512
513**BclError bcl_err(BclNumber** _n_**)**
514
515:   Checks for errors in a **BclNumber**. All functions that can return a
516    **BclNumber** can encode an error in the number, and this function will
517    return the error, if any. If there was no error, it will return
518    **BCL_ERROR_NONE**.
519
520    There must be a valid current context.
521
522## Numbers
523
524All procedures in this section require a valid current context.
525
526**BclNumber**
527
528:   A handle to an arbitrary-precision number. The actual number type is not
529    exposed; the **BclNumber** handle is the only way clients can refer to
530    instances of arbitrary-precision numbers.
531
532**BclNumber bcl_num_create(**_void_**)**
533
534:   Creates and returns a **BclNumber**.
535
536    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
537    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
538
539    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
540    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
541
542**void bcl_num_free(BclNumber** _n_**)**
543
544:   Frees *n*. It is undefined behavior to use *n* after calling this function.
545
546**bool bcl_num_neg(BclNumber** _n_**)**
547
548:   Returns **true** if *n* is negative, **false** otherwise.
549
550**void bcl_num_setNeg(BclNumber** _n_**, bool** _neg_**)**
551
552:   Sets *n*'s sign to *neg*, where **true** is negative, and **false** is
553    positive.
554
555**size_t bcl_num_scale(BclNumber** _n_**)**
556
557:   Returns the *scale* of *n*.
558
559    The *scale* of a number is the number of decimal places it has after the
560    radix (decimal point).
561
562**BclError bcl_num_setScale(BclNumber** _n_**, size_t** _scale_**)**
563
564:   Sets the *scale* of *n* to the argument *scale*. If the argument *scale* is
565    greater than the *scale* of *n*, *n* is extended. If the argument *scale* is
566    less than the *scale* of *n*, *n* is truncated.
567
568    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
569    function can return:
570
571    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
572    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
573    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
574
575**size_t bcl_num_len(BclNumber** _n_**)**
576
577:   Returns the number of *significant decimal digits* in *n*.
578
579## Conversion
580
581All procedures in this section require a valid current context.
582
583All procedures in this section without the **_keep** suffix in their name
584consume the given **BclNumber** arguments that are not given to pointer
585arguments. See the **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
586
587**BclNumber bcl_parse(const char \*restrict** _val_**)**
588
589:   Parses a number string according to the current context's **ibase** and
590    returns the resulting number.
591
592    *val* must be non-**NULL** and a valid string. See
593    **BCL_ERROR_PARSE_INVALID_STR** in the **ERRORS** section for more
594    information.
595
596    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
597    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
598
599    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
600    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
601    * **BCL_ERROR_PARSE_INVALID_STR**
602    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
603
604**char\* bcl_string(BclNumber** _n_**)**
605
606:   Returns a string representation of *n* according the the current context's
607    **ibase**. The string is dynamically allocated and must be freed by the
608    caller.
609
610    *n* is consumed; it cannot be used after the call. See the
611    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
612
613**char\* bcl_string_keep(BclNumber** _n_**)**
614
615:   Returns a string representation of *n* according the the current context's
616    **ibase**. The string is dynamically allocated and must be freed by the
617    caller.
618
619**BclError bcl_bigdig(BclNumber** _n_**, BclBigDig \***_result_**)**
620
621:   Converts *n* into a **BclBigDig** and returns the result in the space
622    pointed to by *result*.
623
624    *a* must be smaller than **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**. See the **LIMITS** section.
625
626    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
627    function can return:
628
629    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
630    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
631    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_OVERFLOW**
632
633    *n* is consumed; it cannot be used after the call. See the
634    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
635
636**BclError bcl_bigdig_keep(BclNumber** _n_**, BclBigDig \***_result_**)**
637
638:   Converts *n* into a **BclBigDig** and returns the result in the space
639    pointed to by *result*.
640
641    *a* must be smaller than **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**. See the **LIMITS** section.
642
643    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
644    function can return:
645
646    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
647    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
648    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_OVERFLOW**
649
650**BclNumber bcl_bigdig2num(BclBigDig** _val_**)**
651
652:   Creates a **BclNumber** from *val*.
653
654    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
655    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
656
657    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
658    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
659
660## Math
661
662All procedures in this section require a valid current context.
663
664All procedures in this section without the **_keep** suffix in their name
665consume the given **BclNumber** arguments that are not given to pointer
666arguments. See the **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
667
668All procedures in this section can return the following errors:
669
670* **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
671* **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
672* **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
673
674**BclNumber bcl_add(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
675
676:   Adds *a* and *b* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is the
677    max of the *scale*s of *a* and *b*.
678
679    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
680    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
681
682    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
683
684    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
685    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
686
687    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
688    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
689    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
690
691**BclNumber bcl_add_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
692
693:   Adds *a* and *b* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is the
694    max of the *scale*s of *a* and *b*.
695
696    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
697
698    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
699    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
700
701    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
702    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
703    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
704
705**BclNumber bcl_sub(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
706
707:   Subtracts *b* from *a* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is
708    the max of the *scale*s of *a* and *b*.
709
710    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
711    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
712
713    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
714
715    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
716    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
717
718    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
719    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
720    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
721
722**BclNumber bcl_sub_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
723
724:   Subtracts *b* from *a* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is
725    the max of the *scale*s of *a* and *b*.
726
727    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
728
729    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
730    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
731
732    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
733    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
734    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
735
736**BclNumber bcl_mul(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
737
738:   Multiplies *a* and *b* and returns the result. If *ascale* is the *scale* of
739    *a* and *bscale* is the *scale* of *b*, the *scale* of the result is equal
740    to **min(ascale+bscale,max(scale,ascale,bscale))**, where **min()** and
741    **max()** return the obvious values.
742
743    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
744    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
745
746    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
747
748    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
749    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
750
751    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
752    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
753    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
754
755**BclNumber bcl_mul_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
756
757:   Multiplies *a* and *b* and returns the result. If *ascale* is the *scale* of
758    *a* and *bscale* is the *scale* of *b*, the *scale* of the result is equal
759    to **min(ascale+bscale,max(scale,ascale,bscale))**, where **min()** and
760    **max()** return the obvious values.
761
762    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
763
764    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
765    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
766
767    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
768    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
769    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
770
771**BclNumber bcl_div(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
772
773:   Divides *a* by *b* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is the
774    *scale* of the current context.
775
776    *b* cannot be **0**.
777
778    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
779    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
780
781    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
782
783    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
784    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
785
786    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
787    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
788    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
789    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
790
791**BclNumber bcl_div_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
792
793:   Divides *a* by *b* and returns the result. The *scale* of the result is the
794    *scale* of the current context.
795
796    *b* cannot be **0**.
797
798    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
799
800    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
801    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
802
803    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
804    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
805    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
806    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
807
808**BclNumber bcl_mod(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
809
810:   Divides *a* by *b* to the *scale* of the current context, computes the
811    modulus **a-(a/b)\*b**, and returns the modulus.
812
813    *b* cannot be **0**.
814
815    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
816    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
817
818    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
819
820    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
821    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
822
823    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
824    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
825    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
826    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
827
828**BclNumber bcl_mod_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
829
830:   Divides *a* by *b* to the *scale* of the current context, computes the
831    modulus **a-(a/b)\*b**, and returns the modulus.
832
833    *b* cannot be **0**.
834
835    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
836
837    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
838    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
839
840    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
841    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
842    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
843    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
844
845**BclNumber bcl_pow(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
846
847:   Calculates *a* to the power of *b* to the *scale* of the current context.
848    *b* must be an integer, but can be negative. If it is negative, *a* must
849    be non-zero.
850
851    *b* must be an integer. If *b* is negative, *a* must not be **0**.
852
853    *a* must be smaller than **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**. See the **LIMITS** section.
854
855    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
856    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
857
858    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
859
860    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
861    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
862
863    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
864    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
865    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
866    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_OVERFLOW**
867    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
868    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
869
870**BclNumber bcl_pow_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
871
872:   Calculates *a* to the power of *b* to the *scale* of the current context.
873    *b* must be an integer, but can be negative. If it is negative, *a* must
874    be non-zero.
875
876    *b* must be an integer. If *b* is negative, *a* must not be **0**.
877
878    *a* must be smaller than **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**. See the **LIMITS** section.
879
880    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
881
882    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
883    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
884
885    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
886    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
887    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
888    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_OVERFLOW**
889    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
890    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
891
892**BclNumber bcl_lshift(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
893
894:   Shifts *a* left (moves the radix right) by *b* places and returns the
895    result. This is done in decimal. *b* must be an integer.
896
897    *b* must be an integer.
898
899    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
900    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
901
902    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
903
904    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
905    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
906
907    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
908    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
909    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
910    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
911
912**BclNumber bcl_lshift_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
913
914:   Shifts *a* left (moves the radix right) by *b* places and returns the
915    result. This is done in decimal. *b* must be an integer.
916
917    *b* must be an integer.
918
919    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
920
921    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
922    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
923
924    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
925    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
926    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
927    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
928
929**BclNumber bcl_rshift(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
930
931:   Shifts *a* right (moves the radix left) by *b* places and returns the
932    result. This is done in decimal. *b* must be an integer.
933
934    *b* must be an integer.
935
936    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
937    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
938
939    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
940
941    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
942    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
943
944    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
945    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
946    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
947    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
948
949**BclNumber bcl_rshift_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
950
951:   Shifts *a* right (moves the radix left) by *b* places and returns the
952    result. This is done in decimal. *b* must be an integer.
953
954    *b* must be an integer.
955
956    *a* and *b* can be the same number.
957
958    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
959    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
960
961    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
962    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
963    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
964    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
965
966**BclNumber bcl_sqrt(BclNumber** _a_**)**
967
968:   Calculates the square root of *a* and returns the result. The *scale* of the
969    result is equal to the **scale** of the current context.
970
971    *a* cannot be negative.
972
973    *a* is consumed; it cannot be used after the call. See the
974    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
975
976    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
977    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
978
979    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
980    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
981    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
982    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
983
984**BclNumber bcl_sqrt_keep(BclNumber** _a_**)**
985
986:   Calculates the square root of *a* and returns the result. The *scale* of the
987    result is equal to the **scale** of the current context.
988
989    *a* cannot be negative.
990
991    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
992    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
993
994    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
995    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
996    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
997    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
998
999**BclError bcl_divmod(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber \***_c_**, BclNumber \***_d_**)**
1000
1001:   Divides *a* by *b* and returns the quotient in a new number which is put
1002    into the space pointed to by *c*, and puts the modulus in a new number which
1003    is put into the space pointed to by *d*.
1004
1005    *b* cannot be **0**.
1006
1007    *a* and *b* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
1008    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
1009
1010    *c* and *d* cannot point to the same place, nor can they point to the space
1011    occupied by *a* or *b*.
1012
1013    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1014    function can return:
1015
1016    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1017    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1018    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
1019    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1020
1021**BclError bcl_divmod_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber \***_c_**, BclNumber \***_d_**)**
1022
1023:   Divides *a* by *b* and returns the quotient in a new number which is put
1024    into the space pointed to by *c*, and puts the modulus in a new number which
1025    is put into the space pointed to by *d*.
1026
1027    *b* cannot be **0**.
1028
1029    *c* and *d* cannot point to the same place, nor can they point to the space
1030    occupied by *a* or *b*.
1031
1032    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1033    function can return:
1034
1035    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1036    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1037    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
1038    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1039
1040**BclNumber bcl_modexp(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber** _c_**)**
1041
1042:   Computes a modular exponentiation where *a* is the base, *b* is the
1043    exponent, and *c* is the modulus, and returns the result. The *scale* of the
1044    result is equal to the **scale** of the current context.
1045
1046    *a*, *b*, and *c* must be integers. *c* must not be **0**. *b* must not be
1047    negative.
1048
1049    *a*, *b*, and *c* are consumed; they cannot be used after the call. See the
1050    **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
1051
1052    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1053    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1054
1055    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1056    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1057    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1058    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1059    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
1060    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1061
1062**BclNumber bcl_modexp_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**, BclNumber** _c_**)**
1063
1064:   Computes a modular exponentiation where *a* is the base, *b* is the
1065    exponent, and *c* is the modulus, and returns the result. The *scale* of the
1066    result is equal to the **scale** of the current context.
1067
1068    *a*, *b*, and *c* must be integers. *c* must not be **0**. *b* must not be
1069    negative.
1070
1071    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1072    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1073
1074    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1075    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1076    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1077    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1078    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
1079    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1080
1081## Miscellaneous
1082
1083**void bcl_zero(BclNumber** _n_**)**
1084
1085:   Sets *n* to **0**.
1086
1087**void bcl_one(BclNumber** _n_**)**
1088
1089:   Sets *n* to **1**.
1090
1091**ssize_t bcl_cmp(BclNumber** _a_**, BclNumber** _b_**)**
1092
1093:   Compares *a* and *b* and returns **0** if *a* and *b* are equal, **<0** if
1094    *a* is less than *b*, and **>0** if *a* is greater than *b*.
1095
1096**BclError bcl_copy(BclNumber** _d_**, BclNumber** _s_**)**
1097
1098:   Copies *s* into *d*.
1099
1100    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1101    function can return:
1102
1103    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1104    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1105    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1106
1107**BclNumber bcl_dup(BclNumber** _s_**)**
1108
1109:   Creates and returns a new **BclNumber** that is a copy of *s*.
1110
1111    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1112    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1113
1114    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1115    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1116    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1117
1118## Pseudo-Random Number Generator
1119
1120The pseudo-random number generator in bcl(3) is a *seeded* PRNG. Given the same
1121seed twice, it will produce the same sequence of pseudo-random numbers twice.
1122
1123By default, bcl(3) attempts to seed the PRNG with data from **/dev/urandom**. If
1124that fails, it seeds itself with by calling **libc**'s **srand(time(NULL))** and
1125then calling **rand()** for each byte, since **rand()** is only guaranteed to
1126return **15** bits.
1127
1128This should provide fairly good seeding in the standard case while also
1129remaining fairly portable.
1130
1131If necessary, the PRNG can be reseeded with one of the following functions:
1132
1133* **bcl_rand_seedWithNum(BclNumber)**
1134* **bcl_rand_seed(unsigned char[**_BCL_SEED_SIZE_**])**
1135* **bcl_rand_reseed(**_void_**)**
1136
1137All procedures in this section without the **_keep** suffix in their name
1138consume the given **BclNumber** arguments that are not given to pointer
1139arguments. See the **Consumption and Propagation** subsection below.
1140
1141The following items allow clients to use the pseudo-random number generator. All
1142procedures require a valid current context.
1143
1144**BCL_SEED_ULONGS**
1145
1146:   The number of **unsigned long**'s in a seed for bcl(3)'s random number
1147    generator.
1148
1149**BCL_SEED_SIZE**
1150
1151:   The size, in **char**'s, of a seed for bcl(3)'s random number generator.
1152
1153**BclBigDig**
1154
1155:   bcl(3)'s overflow type (see the **PERFORMANCE** section).
1156
1157**BclRandInt**
1158
1159:   An unsigned integer type returned by bcl(3)'s random number generator.
1160
1161**BclNumber bcl_irand(BclNumber** _a_**)**
1162
1163:   Returns a random number that is not larger than *a* in a new number. If *a*
1164    is **0** or **1**, the new number is equal to **0**. The bound is unlimited,
1165    so it is not bound to the size of **BclRandInt**. This is done by generating
1166    as many random numbers as necessary, multiplying them by certain exponents,
1167    and adding them all together.
1168
1169    *a* must be an integer and non-negative.
1170
1171    *a* is consumed; it cannot be used after the call. See the **Consumption and
1172    Propagation** subsection below.
1173
1174    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1175
1176    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1177    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1178
1179    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1180    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1181    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1182    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1183    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1184
1185**BclNumber bcl_irand_keep(BclNumber** _a_**)**
1186
1187:   Returns a random number that is not larger than *a* in a new number. If *a*
1188    is **0** or **1**, the new number is equal to **0**. The bound is unlimited,
1189    so it is not bound to the size of **BclRandInt**. This is done by generating
1190    as many random numbers as necessary, multiplying them by certain exponents,
1191    and adding them all together.
1192
1193    *a* must be an integer and non-negative.
1194
1195    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1196
1197    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1198    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1199
1200    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1201    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1202    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1203    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1204    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1205
1206**BclNumber bcl_frand(size_t** _places_**)**
1207
1208:   Returns a random number between **0** (inclusive) and **1** (exclusive) that
1209    has *places* decimal digits after the radix (decimal point). There are no
1210    limits on *places*.
1211
1212    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1213
1214    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1215    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1216
1217    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1218    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1219
1220**BclNumber bcl_ifrand(BclNumber** _a_**, size_t** _places_**)**
1221
1222:   Returns a random number less than *a* with *places* decimal digits after the
1223    radix (decimal point). There are no limits on *a* or *places*.
1224
1225    *a* must be an integer and non-negative.
1226
1227    *a* is consumed; it cannot be used after the call. See the **Consumption and
1228    Propagation** subsection below.
1229
1230    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1231
1232    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1233    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1234
1235    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1236    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1237    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1238    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1239    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1240
1241**BclNumber bcl_ifrand_keep(BclNumber** _a_**, size_t** _places_**)**
1242
1243:   Returns a random number less than *a* with *places* decimal digits after the
1244    radix (decimal point). There are no limits on *a* or *places*.
1245
1246    *a* must be an integer and non-negative.
1247
1248    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1249
1250    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1251    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1252
1253    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1254    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1255    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1256    * **BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1257    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1258
1259**BclError bcl_rand_seedWithNum(BclNumber** _n_**)**
1260
1261:   Seeds the PRNG with *n*.
1262
1263    *n* is consumed.
1264
1265    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1266
1267    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1268    function can return:
1269
1270    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1271    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1272
1273    Note that if **bcl_rand_seed2num(**_void_**)** or
1274    **bcl_rand_seed2num_err(BclNumber)** are called right after this function,
1275    they are not guaranteed to return a number equal to *n*.
1276
1277**BclError bcl_rand_seedWithNum_keep(BclNumber** _n_**)**
1278
1279:   Seeds the PRNG with *n*.
1280
1281    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1282
1283    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1284    function can return:
1285
1286    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1287    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1288
1289    Note that if **bcl_rand_seed2num(**_void_**)** or
1290    **bcl_rand_seed2num_err(BclNumber)** are called right after this function,
1291    they are not guaranteed to return a number equal to *n*.
1292
1293**BclError bcl_rand_seed(unsigned char** _seed_**[**_BCL_SEED_SIZE_**])**
1294
1295:   Seeds the PRNG with the bytes in *seed*.
1296
1297    If there was no error, **BCL_ERROR_NONE** is returned. Otherwise, this
1298    function can return:
1299
1300    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1301
1302**void bcl_rand_reseed(**_void_**)**
1303
1304:   Reseeds the PRNG with the default reseeding behavior. First, it attempts to
1305    read data from **/dev/urandom** and falls back to **libc**'s **rand()**.
1306
1307    This procedure cannot fail.
1308
1309**BclNumber bcl_rand_seed2num(**_void_**)**
1310
1311:   Returns the current seed of the PRNG as a **BclNumber**.
1312
1313    This procedure requires a valid current context.
1314
1315    bcl(3) will encode an error in the return value, if there was one. The error
1316    can be queried with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**. Possible errors include:
1317
1318    * **BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1319    * **BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1320
1321**BclRandInt bcl_rand_int(**_void_**)**
1322
1323:   Returns a random integer between **0** and **BC_RAND_MAX** (inclusive).
1324
1325    This procedure cannot fail.
1326
1327**BclRandInt bcl_rand_bounded(BclRandInt** _bound_**)**
1328
1329:   Returns a random integer between **0** and *bound* (exclusive). Bias is
1330    removed before returning the integer.
1331
1332    This procedure cannot fail.
1333
1334## Consumption and Propagation
1335
1336Some functions are listed as consuming some or all of their arguments. This
1337means that the arguments are freed, regardless of if there were errors or not.
1338
1339This is to enable compact code like the following:
1340
1341    BclNumber n = bcl_num_add(bcl_num_mul(a, b), bcl_num_div(c, d));
1342
1343If arguments to those functions were not consumed, memory would be leaked until
1344reclaimed with **bcl_ctxt_freeNums(BclContext)**.
1345
1346When errors occur, they are propagated through. The result should always be
1347checked with **bcl_err(BclNumber)**, so the example above should properly
1348be:
1349
1350    BclNumber n = bcl_num_add(bcl_num_mul(a, b), bcl_num_div(c, d));
1351    if (bcl_err(n) != BCL_ERROR_NONE) {
1352        // Handle the error.
1353    }
1354
1355# ERRORS
1356
1357Most functions in bcl(3) return, directly or indirectly, any one of the error
1358codes defined in **BclError**. The complete list of codes is the following:
1359
1360**BCL_ERROR_NONE**
1361
1362:   Success; no error occurred.
1363
1364**BCL_ERROR_INVALID_NUM**
1365
1366:   An invalid **BclNumber** was given as a parameter.
1367
1368**BCL_ERROR_INVALID_CONTEXT**
1369
1370:   An invalid **BclContext** is being used.
1371
1372**BCL_ERROR_MATH_NEGATIVE**
1373
1374:   A negative number was given as an argument to a parameter that cannot accept
1375    negative numbers, such as for square roots.
1376
1377**BCL_ERROR_MATH_NON_INTEGER**
1378
1379:   A non-integer was given as an argument to a parameter that cannot accept
1380    non-integer numbers, such as for the second parameter of **bcl_num_pow()**.
1381
1382**BCL_ERROR_MATH_OVERFLOW**
1383
1384:   A number that would overflow its result was given as an argument, such as
1385    for converting a **BclNumber** to a **BclBigDig**.
1386
1387**BCL_ERROR_MATH_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO**
1388
1389:   A divide by zero occurred.
1390
1391**BCL_ERROR_PARSE_INVALID_STR**
1392
1393:   An invalid number string was passed to a parsing function.
1394
1395    A valid number string can only be one radix (period). In addition, any
1396    lowercase ASCII letters, symbols, or non-ASCII characters are invalid. It is
1397    allowed for the first character to be a dash. In that case, the number is
1398    considered to be negative.
1399
1400    There is one exception to the above: one lowercase **e** is allowed in the
1401    number, after the radix, if it exists. If the letter **e** exists, the
1402    number is considered to be in scientific notation, where the part before the
1403    **e** is the number, and the part after, which must be an integer, is the
1404    exponent. There can be a dash right after the **e** to indicate a negative
1405    exponent.
1406
1407    **WARNING**: Both the number and the exponent in scientific notation are
1408    interpreted according to the current **ibase**, but the number is still
1409    multiplied by **10\^exponent** regardless of the current **ibase**. For
1410    example, if **ibase** is **16** and bcl(3) is given the number string
1411    **FFeA**, the resulting decimal number will be **2550000000000**, and if
1412    bcl(3) is given the number string **10e-4**, the resulting decimal number
1413    will be **0.0016**.
1414
1415**BCL_ERROR_FATAL_ALLOC_ERR**
1416
1417:   bcl(3) failed to allocate memory.
1418
1419    If clients call **bcl_setAbortOnFatalError()** with an **true** argument,
1420    this error will cause bcl(3) to throw a **SIGABRT**. This behavior can also
1421    be turned off later by calling that same function with a **false** argument.
1422    By default, this behavior is off.
1423
1424    It is highly recommended that client libraries do *not* activate this
1425    behavior.
1426
1427**BCL_ERROR_FATAL_UNKNOWN_ERR**
1428
1429:   An unknown error occurred.
1430
1431    If clients call **bcl_setAbortOnFatalError()** with an **true** argument,
1432    this error will cause bcl(3) to throw a **SIGABRT**. This behavior can also
1433    be turned off later by calling that same function with a **false** argument.
1434    By default, this behavior is off.
1435
1436    It is highly recommended that client libraries do *not* activate this
1437    behavior.
1438
1439# ATTRIBUTES
1440
1441bcl(3) is *MT-Safe*: it is safe to call any functions from more than one thread.
1442However, is is *not* safe to pass any data between threads except for strings
1443returned by **bcl_string()**.
1444
1445bcl(3) is not *async-signal-safe*. It was not possible to make bcl(3) safe with
1446signals and also make it safe with multiple threads. If it is necessary to be
1447able to interrupt bcl(3), spawn a separate thread to run the calculation.
1448
1449# PERFORMANCE
1450
1451Most bc(1) implementations use **char** types to calculate the value of **1**
1452decimal digit at a time, but that can be slow. bcl(3) does something
1453different.
1454
1455It uses large integers to calculate more than **1** decimal digit at a time. If
1456built in a environment where **BC_LONG_BIT** (see the **LIMITS** section) is
1457**64**, then each integer has **9** decimal digits. If built in an environment
1458where **BC_LONG_BIT** is **32** then each integer has **4** decimal digits. This
1459value (the number of decimal digits per large integer) is called
1460**BC_BASE_DIGS**.
1461
1462In addition, this bcl(3) uses an even larger integer for overflow checking. This
1463integer type depends on the value of **BC_LONG_BIT**, but is always at least
1464twice as large as the integer type used to store digits.
1465
1466# LIMITS
1467
1468The following are the limits on bcl(3):
1469
1470**BC_LONG_BIT**
1471
1472:   The number of bits in the **long** type in the environment where bcl(3) was
1473    built. This determines how many decimal digits can be stored in a single
1474    large integer (see the **PERFORMANCE** section).
1475
1476**BC_BASE_DIGS**
1477
1478:   The number of decimal digits per large integer (see the **PERFORMANCE**
1479    section). Depends on **BC_LONG_BIT**.
1480
1481**BC_BASE_POW**
1482
1483:   The max decimal number that each large integer can store (see
1484    **BC_BASE_DIGS**) plus **1**. Depends on **BC_BASE_DIGS**.
1485
1486**BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**
1487
1488:   The max number that the overflow type (see the **PERFORMANCE** section) can
1489    hold. Depends on **BC_LONG_BIT**.
1490
1491**BC_BASE_MAX**
1492
1493:   The maximum output base. Set at **BC_BASE_POW**.
1494
1495**BC_SCALE_MAX**
1496
1497:   The maximum **scale**. Set at **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1498
1499**BC_NUM_MAX**
1500
1501:   The maximum length of a number (in decimal digits), which includes digits
1502    after the decimal point. Set at **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1503
1504**BC_RAND_MAX**
1505
1506:   The maximum integer (inclusive) returned by the **bcl_rand_int()** function.
1507    Set at **2\^BC_LONG_BIT-1**.
1508
1509Exponent
1510
1511:   The maximum allowable exponent (positive or negative). Set at
1512    **BC_OVERFLOW_MAX**.
1513
1514These limits are meant to be effectively non-existent; the limits are so large
1515(at least on 64-bit machines) that there should not be any point at which they
1516become a problem. In fact, memory should be exhausted before these limits should
1517be hit.
1518
1519# SEE ALSO
1520
1521bc(1) and dc(1)
1522
1523# STANDARDS
1524
1525bcl(3) is compliant with the arithmetic defined in the IEEE Std 1003.1-2017
1526(“POSIX.1-2017”) specification at
1527https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/bc.html for bc(1).
1528
1529Note that the specification explicitly says that bc(1) only accepts numbers that
1530use a period (**.**) as a radix point, regardless of the value of
1531**LC_NUMERIC**. This is also true of bcl(3).
1532
1533# BUGS
1534
1535None are known. Report bugs at https://git.gavinhoward.com/gavin/bc.
1536
1537# AUTHORS
1538
1539Gavin D. Howard <gavin@gavinhoward.com> and contributors.
1540