A collection of macros for generating fixed-size fixed-point numeric types that exactly fit your domain. The types are fully equipped for performing mathematical computations and are easy to use.
With a simple macro call you get a type that:
- has no representation errors in the range, defined by the type parameters,
- supports arithmetic operations:
+
,-
,*
,/
,%
,<<
,>>
, - comes with mathematical functions:
abs()
,powi()
,sqrt()
, - has special values NaN and ±Infinity, and uses them instead of panicing,
- provides basic mathematical constants,
- seamlessly interacts with Rust's primitive types,
- converts values to/from byte arrays,
- creates values and performs math operations on stack, avoiding heap allocations.
You should probably give fdec a try if:
- you need primitive types like
i256
ori1408
, which Rust doesn't provide, - your business domain is not tolerant to representation errors that may add up during computations (like working with money in finance),
- other libraries that provide decimal numbers are not fast enough for you when it comes to doing math,
- you need to store lots of decimal numbers, and you'd prefer it to be memory-efficient,
- you're just curious to see how it works.
Add the dependency on fdec
to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
fdec = "0.3.1"
Import it at your crate's root with the macro_use
attribute:
#[macro_use]
extern crate fdec;
Add custom numeric types to your project by calling fdec*
macros:
fdec64! { // Use 64-bit units
module bigdec, // Put all the generated code into the `bigdec` module
name BigDec, // The name for the generated type
length 5, // 5 * 64-bit units = 320 bits to store numbers
scale 50 // Use 50 decimal places
}
Here we define the Decimal
structure that represents 160-bit numbers
with 30 decimal places.
#[macro_use]
extern crate fdec;
fdec32! { // Use 32-bit units
module dec, // Put all the generated code into the `dec` module
name Decimal, // Name the main struct `Decimal`
length 5, // 5 * 32-bit units = 160 bits to store numbers
scale 30 // Use 30 decimal places
}
use dec::*; // Bring the generated stuff to the scope
fn main() {
// Use it
let a = Decimal::one();
let b = Decimal::from(14);
let c = dec!(9);
let result = a + 30 * (b / c).powi(3);
println!("{} + 30 * ({} / {})^3 = {}", a, b, c, result);
// 1 + 30 * (14 / 9)^3 = 113.92181069958847736625514403278
}
More examples come with the crate's source code:
- Many ways to create values: creation.rs
- Compute Fibonacci numbers: fibonacci.rs
- Calculate square root with high precision: sqrt.rs