@stdlib/math-base-ops-imuldw
v0.2.2
Published
Compute the double word product of two signed 32-bit integers.
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imuldw
Compute the double word product of two signed 32-bit integers.
Installation
npm install @stdlib/math-base-ops-imuldw
Usage
var imuldw = require( '@stdlib/math-base-ops-imuldw' );
imuldw( a, b )
Multiplies two signed 32-bit integers and returns an array
of two signed 32-bit integers which represents the signed 64-bit integer product.
var v = imuldw( 1, 10 );
// returns [ 0, 10 ]
v = imuldw( 0x80000000|0, 0x40000000|0 ); // -(2^31) * 2^30 = -2305843009213694000 => 32-bit integer overflow
// returns [ -536870912, 0 ]
imuldw.assign( a, b, out, stride, offset )
Multiplies two signed 32-bit integers and assigns results representing the signed 64-bit integer product to a provided output array.
var out = [ 0, 0 ];
var v = imuldw.assign( 1, 10, out, 1, 0 );
// returns [ 0, 10 ]
var bool = ( v === out );
// returns true
Notes
- When computing the product of 32-bit integer values in double-precision floating-point format (the default JavaScript numeric data type), computing the double word product is necessary in order to avoid exceeding the maximum safe double-precision floating-point integer value.
Examples
var lpad = require( '@stdlib/string-left-pad' );
var imuldw = require( '@stdlib/math-base-ops-imuldw' );
var i;
var j;
var y;
for ( i = 0x7FFFFFF0; i < 0x7FFFFFFF; i++ ) {
for ( j = i; j < 0x7FFFFFFF; j++) {
y = imuldw( i|0, j|0 );
console.log( '%d x %d = 0x%s%s', i|0, j|0, lpad( ( y[0] >>> 0 ).toString( 16 ), 8, '0'), lpad( ( y[1] >>> 0 ).toString( 16 ), 8, '0' ) );
}
}
See Also
@stdlib/math-base/ops/imul
: perform C-like multiplication of two signed 32-bit integers.
Notice
This package is part of stdlib, a standard library for JavaScript and Node.js, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computing. The library provides a collection of robust, high performance libraries for mathematics, statistics, streams, utilities, and more.
For more information on the project, filing bug reports and feature requests, and guidance on how to develop stdlib, see the main project repository.
Community
License
See LICENSE.
Copyright
Copyright © 2016-2024. The Stdlib Authors.