The IntLog
trait defines the following methods:
fn log10(self) -> usize
fn log2(self) -> usize
fn checked_log10(self) -> Option<usize>
fn checked_log2(self) -> Option<usize>
The log2
and log10
methods are optimized for the integer width and are
[inline]
since the code remains small enough. They typically use constant tables
that are only stored once, even if the methods using them are inlined multiple times.
The checked versions of the methods, checked_log2
and checked_log10
,
return None
if the logarithm is undefined for the parameter value, whereas the unchecked
methods mentioned above simply panic or return a wrong value.
use ilog::IntLog;
let hundred: u32 = 100;
assert_eq!(hundred.log10(), 2);
assert_eq!(u32::log10(99), 1);
let value: u64 = 256;
assert_eq!(value.log2(), 8);
assert_eq!(u64::log2(255), 7);
assert_eq!(u32::checked_log2(63), Some(5));
assert_eq!(0_u32.checked_log2(), None);
The ilog
crate is tested for rustc 1.65 and greater, on Windows 64-bit and Linux 64/32-bit platforms.
It doesn't require the std
library, and supports 16-, 32- and 64-bit architectures.
Note that in versions 1.64 and earlier, log
, log2
and log10
were nightly experimental core::num
methods, which were then renamed
respectively to ilog
, ilog2
and ilog10
in version 1.65 (and are still experimental). This was unknown to the author when the
crate was first published.
Should you need to use this crate with earlier versions of rustc, the warnings can be masked with this file directive:
#![allow(unstable_name_collisions)]
or with this directive in front of the function using the methods:
#[allow(unstable_name_collisions)]
RELEASES.md keeps a log of all the releases.
Licensed under MIT license.