1Number::Tolerant(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Number::Tolerant(3)
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6 Number::Tolerant - tolerance ranges for inexact numbers
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9 version 1.708
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12 use Number::Tolerant;
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14 my $range = tolerance(10 => to => 12);
15 my $random = 10 + rand(2);
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17 die "I shouldn't die" unless $random == $range;
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19 print "This line will always print.\n";
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22 Number::Tolerant creates a number-like object whose value refers to a
23 range of possible values, each equally acceptable. It overloads
24 comparison operations to reflect this.
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26 I use this module to simplify the comparison of measurement results to
27 specified tolerances.
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29 reject $product unless $measurement == $specification;
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32 Instantiation
33 new
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35 tolerance
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37 There is a "new" method on the Number::Tolerant class, but it also
38 exports a simple function, "tolerance", which will return an object of
39 the Number::Tolerant class. Both use the same syntax:
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41 my $range = Number::Tolerant->new( $x => $method => $y);
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43 my $range = tolerance( $x => $method => $y);
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45 The meaning of $x and $y are dependent on the value of $method, which
46 describes the nature of the tolerance. Tolerances can be defined in
47 five ways, at present:
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49 method range
50 -------------------+------------------
51 plus_or_minus | x +/- y
52 plus_or_minus_pct | x +/- (y% of x)
53 or_more | x to Inf
54 or_less | x to -Inf
55 more_than | x to Inf, not x
56 less_than | x to -Inf, not x
57 to | x to y
58 infinite | -Inf to Inf
59 offset | (x + y1) to (x + y2)
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61 For "or_less" and "or_more", $y is ignored if passed. For "infinite",
62 neither $x nor $y is used; "infinite" should be the sole argument. The
63 first two arguments can be reversed for "more_than" and "less_than", to
64 be more English-like.
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66 Offset tolerances are slightly unusual. Here is an example:
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68 my $offset_tolerance = tolerance(10 => offset => (-3, 5));
69 # stringifies to: 10 (-3 +5)
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71 An offset is very much like a "plus_or_minus" tolerance, but its center
72 value is not necessarily the midpoint between its extremes. This is
73 significant for comparisons and numifications of the tolerance. Given
74 the following two tolerances:
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76 my $pm_dice = tolerance(10.5 => plus_or_minus => 7.5);
77 my $os_dice = tolerance(11 => offset => (-8, 7));
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79 The first will sort as numerically less than the second.
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81 If the given arguments can't be formed into a tolerance, an exception
82 will be raised.
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84 from_string
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86 A new tolerance can be instantiated from the stringification of an old
87 tolerance. For example:
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89 my $range = Number::Tolerant->from_string("10 to 12");
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91 die "Everything's OK!" if 11 == $range; # program dies of joy
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93 This will not yet parse stringified unions, but that will be
94 implemented in the future. (I just don't need it yet.)
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96 If a string can't be parsed, an exception is raised.
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98 stringify_as
99 my $string = $tolerance->stringify_as($type);
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101 This method does nothing! Someday, it will stringify the given
102 tolerance as a different type, if possible. "10 +/- 1" will
103 "stringify_as('plus_or_minus_pct')" to "10 +/- 10%" for example.
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105 numify
106 my $n = $tolerance->numify;
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108 This returns the numeric form of a tolerance. If a tolerance has both
109 a minimum and a maximum, and they are the same, then that is the
110 numification. Otherwise, numify returns undef.
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112 Overloading
113 Tolerances overload a few operations, mostly comparisons.
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115 boolean
116 Tolerances are always true.
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118 numify
119 Most tolerances numify to undef; see "numify".
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121 stringify
122 A tolerance stringifies to a short description of itself, generally
123 something like "m < x < n"
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125 infinite - "any number"
126 to - "m <= x <= n"
127 or_more - "m <= x"
128 or_less - "x <= n"
129 more_than - "m < x"
130 less_than - "x < n"
131 offset - "x (-y1 +y2)"
132 constant - "x"
133 plus_or_minus - "x +/- y"
134 plus_or_minus_pct - "x +/- y%"
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136 equality
137 A number is equal to a tolerance if it is neither less than nor
138 greater than it. (See below).
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140 smart match
141 Same as equality.
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143 comparison
144 A number is greater than a tolerance if it is greater than its
145 maximum value.
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147 A number is less than a tolerance if it is less than its minimum
148 value.
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150 No number is greater than an "or_more" tolerance or less than an
151 "or_less" tolerance.
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153 "...or equal to" comparisons include the min/max values in the
154 permissible range, as common sense suggests.
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156 tolerance intersection
157 A tolerance "&" a tolerance or number is the intersection of the
158 two ranges. Intersections allow you to quickly narrow down a set
159 of tolerances to the most stringent intersection of values.
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161 tolerance(5 => to => 6) & tolerance(5.5 => to => 6.5);
162 # this yields: tolerance(5.5 => to => 6)
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164 If the given values have no intersection, "()" is returned.
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166 An intersection with a normal number will yield that number, if it
167 is within the tolerance.
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169 tolerance union
170 A tolerance "|" a tolerance or number is the union of the two.
171 Unions allow multiple tolerances, whether they intersect or not, to
172 be treated as one. See Number::Tolerant::Union for more
173 information.
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176 This feature is slighly experimental, but it's here.
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178 New tolerance types may be written as subclasses of
179 Number::Tolerant::Type, providing the interface described in its
180 documentation. They can then be enabled or disabled with the following
181 methods:
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183 " enable_plugin "
184 Number::Tolerant->enable_plugin($class_name);
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186 This method enables the named class, so that attempts to create new
187 tolerances will check against this class. Classes are checked against
188 "validate_plugin" before being enabled. An exception is thrown if the
189 class does not appear to provide the Number::Tolerant::Type interface.
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191 " disable_plugin "
192 Number::Tolerant->disable_plugin($class_name);
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194 This method will disable the named class, so that future attempts to
195 create new tolerances will not check against this class.
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197 " validate_plugin "
198 Number::Tolerant->validate_plugin($class_name);
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200 This method checks (naively) that the given class provides the
201 interface defined in Number::Tolerant::Type. If it does not, an
202 exception is thrown.
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205 · Extend "from_string" to cover unions.
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207 · Extend "from_string" to include Number::Range-type specifications.
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209 · Allow translation into forms not originally used:
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211 my $range = tolerance(9 => to => 17);
212 my $range_pm = $range->convert_to('plus_minus');
213 $range->stringify_as('plus_minus_pct');
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215 · Create a factory so that you can simultaneously work with two sets
216 of plugins.
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218 This one is very near completion. There will now be two classes
219 that should be used: Number::Tolerant::Factory, which produces
220 tolerances, and Number::Tolerant::Tolerance, which is a tolerance.
221 Both will inherit from N::T, for supporting old code, and N::T will
222 dispatch construction methods to a default factory.
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225 The module Number::Range provides another way to deal with ranges of
226 numbers. The major differences are: N::R is set-like, not range-like;
227 N::R does not overload any operators. Number::Tolerant will not (like
228 N::R) attempt to parse a textual range specification like
229 "1..2,5,7..10" unless specifically instructed to. (The valid formats
230 for strings passed to "from_string" does not match Number::Range
231 exactly. See TODO.)
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233 The "Number::Range" code:
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235 $range = Number::Range->new("10..15","20..25");
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237 Is equivalent to the "Number::Tolerant" code:
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239 $range = Number::Tolerant::Union->new(10..15,20..25);
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241 ...while the following code expresses an actual range:
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243 $range = tolerance(10 => to => 15) | tolerance(20 => to => 25);
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246 Thanks to Yuval Kogman and #perl-qa for helping find the bizarre bug
247 that drove the minimum required perl up to 5.8
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249 Thanks to Tom Freedman, who reminded me that this code was fun to work
250 on, and also provided the initial implementation for the offset type.
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253 Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
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256 · Alexandre Mestiashvili <alex@biotec.tu-dresden.de>
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258 · Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
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260 · Michael Carman <mjcarman@cpan.org>
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262 · Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@codesimply.com>
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264 · Smylers <Smylers@stripey.com>
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267 This software is copyright (c) 2004 by Ricardo Signes.
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269 This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
270 the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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274perl v5.28.0 2015-11-01 Number::Tolerant(3)