Floating-Point Objects
**********************

type PyFloatObject

   This subtype of "PyObject" represents a Python floating-point
   object.

PyTypeObject PyFloat_Type
    * Part of the Stable ABI.*

   This instance of "PyTypeObject" represents the Python floating-
   point type.  This is the same object as "float" in the Python
   layer.

int PyFloat_Check(PyObject *p)

   Return true if its argument is a "PyFloatObject" or a subtype of
   "PyFloatObject".  This function always succeeds.

int PyFloat_CheckExact(PyObject *p)

   Return true if its argument is a "PyFloatObject", but not a subtype
   of "PyFloatObject".  This function always succeeds.

PyObject *PyFloat_FromString(PyObject *str)
    *Return value: New reference.** Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Create a "PyFloatObject" object based on the string value in *str*,
   or "NULL" on failure.

PyObject *PyFloat_FromDouble(double v)
    *Return value: New reference.** Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Create a "PyFloatObject" object from *v*, or "NULL" on failure.

double PyFloat_AsDouble(PyObject *pyfloat)
    * Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Return a C double representation of the contents of *pyfloat*.  If
   *pyfloat* is not a Python floating-point object but has a
   "__float__()" method, this method will first be called to convert
   *pyfloat* into a float. If "__float__()" is not defined then it
   falls back to "__index__()". This method returns "-1.0" upon
   failure, so one should call "PyErr_Occurred()" to check for errors.

   Changed in version 3.8: Use "__index__()" if available.

double PyFloat_AS_DOUBLE(PyObject *pyfloat)

   Return a C double representation of the contents of *pyfloat*, but
   without error checking.

PyObject *PyFloat_GetInfo(void)
    *Return value: New reference.** Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Return a structseq instance which contains information about the
   precision, minimum and maximum values of a float. It's a thin
   wrapper around the header file "float.h".

double PyFloat_GetMax()
    * Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Return the maximum representable finite float *DBL_MAX* as C
   double.

double PyFloat_GetMin()
    * Part of the Stable ABI.*

   Return the minimum normalized positive float *DBL_MIN* as C double.

Py_INFINITY

   This macro expands a to constant expression of type double, that
   represents the positive infinity.

   On most platforms, this is equivalent to the "INFINITY" macro from
   the C11 standard "<math.h>" header.

Py_NAN

   This macro expands a to constant expression of type double, that
   represents a quiet not-a-number (qNaN) value.

   On most platforms, this is equivalent to the "NAN" macro from the
   C11 standard "<math.h>" header.

Py_HUGE_VAL

   Equivalent to "INFINITY".

   Deprecated since version 3.14: The macro is *soft deprecated*.

Py_MATH_E

   The definition (accurate for a double type) of the "math.e"
   constant.

Py_MATH_El

   High precision (long double) definition of "e" constant.

Py_MATH_PI

   The definition (accurate for a double type) of the "math.pi"
   constant.

Py_MATH_PIl

   High precision (long double) definition of "pi" constant.

Py_MATH_TAU

   The definition (accurate for a double type) of the "math.tau"
   constant.

   Added in version 3.6.

Py_RETURN_NAN

   Return "math.nan" from a function.

   On most platforms, this is equivalent to "return
   PyFloat_FromDouble(NAN)".

Py_RETURN_INF(sign)

   Return "math.inf" or "-math.inf" from a function, depending on the
   sign of *sign*.

   On most platforms, this is equivalent to the following:

      return PyFloat_FromDouble(copysign(INFINITY, sign));

Py_IS_FINITE(X)

   Return "1" if the given floating-point number *X* is finite, that
   is, it is normal, subnormal or zero, but not infinite or NaN.
   Return "0" otherwise.

   Deprecated since version 3.14: The macro is *soft deprecated*.  Use
   "isfinite" instead.

Py_IS_INFINITY(X)

   Return "1" if the given floating-point number *X* is positive or
   negative infinity.  Return "0" otherwise.

   Deprecated since version 3.14: The macro is *soft deprecated*.  Use
   "isinf" instead.

Py_IS_NAN(X)

   Return "1" if the given floating-point number *X* is a not-a-number
   (NaN) value.  Return "0" otherwise.

   Deprecated since version 3.14: The macro is *soft deprecated*.  Use
   "isnan" instead.


Pack and Unpack functions
=========================

The pack and unpack functions provide an efficient platform-
independent way to store floating-point values as byte strings. The
Pack routines produce a bytes string from a C double, and the Unpack
routines produce a C double from such a bytes string. The suffix (2, 4
or 8) specifies the number of bytes in the bytes string.

On platforms that appear to use IEEE 754 formats these functions work
by copying bits. On other platforms, the 2-byte format is identical to
the IEEE 754 binary16 half-precision format, the 4-byte format
(32-bit) is identical to the IEEE 754 binary32 single precision
format, and the 8-byte format to the IEEE 754 binary64 double
precision format, although the packing of INFs and NaNs (if such
things exist on the platform) isn't handled correctly, and attempting
to unpack a bytes string containing an IEEE INF or NaN will raise an
exception.

On non-IEEE platforms with more precision, or larger dynamic range,
than IEEE 754 supports, not all values can be packed; on non-IEEE
platforms with less precision, or smaller dynamic range, not all
values can be unpacked. What happens in such cases is partly
accidental (alas).

Added in version 3.11.


Pack functions
--------------

The pack routines write 2, 4 or 8 bytes, starting at *p*. *le* is an
int argument, non-zero if you want the bytes string in little-endian
format (exponent last, at "p+1", "p+3", or "p+6" "p+7"), zero if you
want big-endian format (exponent first, at *p*). The "PY_BIG_ENDIAN"
constant can be used to use the native endian: it is equal to "1" on
big endian processor, or "0" on little endian processor.

Return value: "0" if all is OK, "-1" if error (and an exception is
set, most likely "OverflowError").

There are two problems on non-IEEE platforms:

* What this does is undefined if *x* is a NaN or infinity.

* "-0.0" and "+0.0" produce the same bytes string.

int PyFloat_Pack2(double x, char *p, int le)

   Pack a C double as the IEEE 754 binary16 half-precision format.

int PyFloat_Pack4(double x, char *p, int le)

   Pack a C double as the IEEE 754 binary32 single precision format.

int PyFloat_Pack8(double x, char *p, int le)

   Pack a C double as the IEEE 754 binary64 double precision format.


Unpack functions
----------------

The unpack routines read 2, 4 or 8 bytes, starting at *p*.  *le* is an
int argument, non-zero if the bytes string is in little-endian format
(exponent last, at "p+1", "p+3" or "p+6" and "p+7"), zero if big-
endian (exponent first, at *p*). The "PY_BIG_ENDIAN" constant can be
used to use the native endian: it is equal to "1" on big endian
processor, or "0" on little endian processor.

Return value: The unpacked double.  On error, this is "-1.0" and
"PyErr_Occurred()" is true (and an exception is set, most likely
"OverflowError").

Note that on a non-IEEE platform this will refuse to unpack a bytes
string that represents a NaN or infinity.

double PyFloat_Unpack2(const char *p, int le)

   Unpack the IEEE 754 binary16 half-precision format as a C double.

double PyFloat_Unpack4(const char *p, int le)

   Unpack the IEEE 754 binary32 single precision format as a C double.

double PyFloat_Unpack8(const char *p, int le)

   Unpack the IEEE 754 binary64 double precision format as a C double.
