/* * Copyright (C) 2013 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.util; import static com.android.internal.util.Preconditions.*; import java.io.IOException; import java.io.InvalidObjectException; /** *
An immutable data type representation a rational number.
* *Contains a pair of {@code int}s representing the numerator and denominator of a * Rational number.
*/ public final class Rational extends Number implements ComparableA {@code NaN} value is considered to be equal to itself (that is {@code NaN.equals(NaN)} * will return {@code true}; it is always greater than any non-{@code NaN} value (that is * {@code NaN.compareTo(notNaN)} will return a number greater than {@code 0}).
* *Equivalent to constructing a new rational with both the numerator and denominator * equal to {@code 0}.
*/ public static final Rational NaN = new Rational(0, 0); /** * Constant for the positive infinity value of the {@code Rational} type. * *Equivalent to constructing a new rational with a positive numerator and a denominator * equal to {@code 0}.
*/ public static final Rational POSITIVE_INFINITY = new Rational(1, 0); /** * Constant for the negative infinity value of the {@code Rational} type. * *Equivalent to constructing a new rational with a negative numerator and a denominator * equal to {@code 0}.
*/ public static final Rational NEGATIVE_INFINITY = new Rational(-1, 0); /** * Constant for the zero value of the {@code Rational} type. * *Equivalent to constructing a new rational with a numerator equal to {@code 0} and * any non-zero denominator.
*/ public static final Rational ZERO = new Rational(0, 1); /** * Unique version number per class to be compliant with {@link java.io.Serializable}. * *Increment each time the fields change in any way.
*/ private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L; /* * Do not change the order of these fields or add new instance fields to maintain the * Serializable compatibility across API revisions. */ private final int mNumerator; private final int mDenominator; /** *Create a {@code Rational} with a given numerator and denominator.
* *The signs of the numerator and the denominator may be flipped such that the denominator * is always positive. Both the numerator and denominator will be converted to their reduced * forms (see {@link #equals} for more details).
* *For example, *
The numerator will always return {@code 1} if this rational represents * infinity (that is, the denominator is {@code 0}).
*/ public int getNumerator() { return mNumerator; } /** * Gets the denominator of the rational * *The denominator may return {@code 0}, in which case the rational may represent * positive infinity (if the numerator was positive), negative infinity (if the numerator * was negative), or {@code NaN} (if the numerator was {@code 0}).
* *The denominator will always return {@code 1} if the numerator is {@code 0}. */ public int getDenominator() { return mDenominator; } /** * Indicates whether this rational is a Not-a-Number (NaN) value. * *
A {@code NaN} value occurs when both the numerator and the denominator are {@code 0}.
* * @return {@code true} if this rational is a Not-a-Number (NaN) value; * {@code false} if this is a (potentially infinite) number value */ public boolean isNaN() { return mDenominator == 0 && mNumerator == 0; } /** * Indicates whether this rational represents an infinite value. * *An infinite value occurs when the denominator is {@code 0} (but the numerator is not).
* * @return {@code true} if this rational is a (positive or negative) infinite value; * {@code false} if this is a finite number value (or {@code NaN}) */ public boolean isInfinite() { return mNumerator != 0 && mDenominator == 0; } /** * Indicates whether this rational represents a finite value. * *A finite value occurs when the denominator is not {@code 0}; in other words * the rational is neither infinity or {@code NaN}.
* * @return {@code true} if this rational is a (positive or negative) infinite value; * {@code false} if this is a finite number value (or {@code NaN}) */ public boolean isFinite() { return mDenominator != 0; } /** * Indicates whether this rational represents a zero value. * *A zero value is a {@link #isFinite finite} rational with a numerator of {@code 0}.
* * @return {@code true} if this rational is finite zero value; * {@code false} otherwise */ public boolean isZero() { return isFinite() && mNumerator == 0; } private boolean isPosInf() { return mDenominator == 0 && mNumerator > 0; } private boolean isNegInf() { return mDenominator == 0 && mNumerator < 0; } /** *Compare this Rational to another object and see if they are equal.
* *A Rational object can only be equal to another Rational object (comparing against any * other type will return {@code false}).
* *A Rational object is considered equal to another Rational object if and only if one of * the following holds:
*A reduced form of a Rational is calculated by dividing both the numerator and the * denominator by their greatest common divisor.
* *{@code * (new Rational(1, 2)).equals(new Rational(1, 2)) == true // trivially true * (new Rational(2, 3)).equals(new Rational(1, 2)) == false // trivially false * (new Rational(1, 2)).equals(new Rational(2, 4)) == true // true after reduction * (new Rational(0, 0)).equals(new Rational(0, 0)) == true // NaN.equals(NaN) * (new Rational(1, 0)).equals(new Rational(5, 0)) == true // both are +infinity * (new Rational(1, 0)).equals(new Rational(-1, 0)) == false // +infinity != -infinity * }* * @param obj a reference to another object * * @return A boolean that determines whether or not the two Rational objects are equal. */ @Override public boolean equals(Object obj) { return obj instanceof Rational && equals((Rational) obj); } private boolean equals(Rational other) { return (mNumerator == other.mNumerator && mDenominator == other.mDenominator); } /** * Return a string representation of this rational, e.g. {@code "1/2"}. * *
The following rules of conversion apply: *
Convert to a floating point representation.
* * @return The floating point representation of this rational number. * @hide */ public float toFloat() { // TODO: remove this duplicate function (used in CTS and the shim) return floatValue(); } /** * {@inheritDoc} */ @Override public int hashCode() { // Bias the hash code for the first (2^16) values for both numerator and denominator int numeratorFlipped = mNumerator << 16 | mNumerator >>> 16; return mDenominator ^ numeratorFlipped; } /** * Calculates the greatest common divisor using Euclid's algorithm. * *Visible for testing only.
* * @param numerator the numerator in a fraction * @param denominator the denominator in a fraction * * @return An int value representing the gcd. Always positive. * @hide */ public static int gcd(int numerator, int denominator) { /* * Non-recursive implementation of Euclid's algorithm: * * gcd(a, 0) := a * gcd(a, b) := gcd(b, a mod b) * */ int a = numerator; int b = denominator; while (b != 0) { int oldB = b; b = a % b; a = oldB; } return Math.abs(a); } /** * Returns the value of the specified number as a {@code double}. * *The {@code double} is calculated by converting both the numerator and denominator * to a {@code double}; then returning the result of dividing the numerator by the * denominator.
* * @return the divided value of the numerator and denominator as a {@code double}. */ @Override public double doubleValue() { double num = mNumerator; double den = mDenominator; return num / den; } /** * Returns the value of the specified number as a {@code float}. * *The {@code float} is calculated by converting both the numerator and denominator * to a {@code float}; then returning the result of dividing the numerator by the * denominator.
* * @return the divided value of the numerator and denominator as a {@code float}. */ @Override public float floatValue() { float num = mNumerator; float den = mDenominator; return num / den; } /** * Returns the value of the specified number as a {@code int}. * *{@link #isInfinite Finite} rationals are converted to an {@code int} value * by dividing the numerator by the denominator; conversion for non-finite values happens * identically to casting a floating point value to an {@code int}, in particular: * *
*
{@link #isInfinite Finite} rationals are converted to an {@code long} value * by dividing the numerator by the denominator; conversion for non-finite values happens * identically to casting a floating point value to a {@code long}, in particular: * *
*
{@link #isInfinite Finite} rationals are converted to a {@code short} value * identically to {@link #intValue}; the {@code int} result is then truncated to a * {@code short} before returning the value.
* * @return the divided value of the numerator and denominator as a {@code short}. */ @Override public short shortValue() { return (short) intValue(); } /** * Compare this rational to the specified rational to determine their natural order. * *{@link #NaN} is considered to be equal to itself and greater than all other * {@code Rational} values. Otherwise, if the objects are not {@link #equals equal}, then * the following rules apply:
* *The ASCII characters {@code \}{@code u003a} (':') and * {@code \}{@code u002f} ('/') are recognized as separators between * the numerator and denumerator.
** For any {@code Rational r}: {@code Rational.parseRational(r.toString()).equals(r)}. * However, the method also handles rational numbers expressed in the * following forms:
** "num{@code /}den" or * "num{@code :}den" {@code => new Rational(num, den);}, * where num and den are string integers potentially * containing a sign, such as "-10", "+7" or "5".
* *{@code * Rational.parseRational("3:+6").equals(new Rational(1, 2)) == true * Rational.parseRational("-3/-6").equals(new Rational(1, 2)) == true * Rational.parseRational("4.56") => throws NumberFormatException * }* * @param string the string representation of a rational value. * @return the rational value represented by {@code string}. * * @throws NumberFormatException if {@code string} cannot be parsed * as a rational value. * @throws NullPointerException if {@code string} was {@code null} */ public static Rational parseRational(String string) throws NumberFormatException { checkNotNull(string, "string must not be null"); if (string.equals("NaN")) { return NaN; } else if (string.equals("Infinity")) { return POSITIVE_INFINITY; } else if (string.equals("-Infinity")) { return NEGATIVE_INFINITY; } int sep_ix = string.indexOf(':'); if (sep_ix < 0) { sep_ix = string.indexOf('/'); } if (sep_ix < 0) { throw invalidRational(string); } try { return new Rational(Integer.parseInt(string.substring(0, sep_ix)), Integer.parseInt(string.substring(sep_ix + 1))); } catch (NumberFormatException e) { throw invalidRational(string); } } }