decimal_to_floating(3)
NAME
decimal_to_floating, decimal_to_single, decimal_to_double, decimal_to_extended, decimal_to_quadruple − convert decimal record to floating-point value
SYNOPSIS
#include <floatingpoint.h>
void decimal_to_single(single ∗px, decimal_mode ∗pm, decimal_record ∗pd,
fp_exception_field_type ∗ps);
void decimal_to_double(double ∗px, decimal_mode ∗pm, decimal_record ∗pd,
fp_exception_field_type ∗ps);
void decimal_to_extended(extended ∗px, decimal_mode ∗pm, decimal_record ∗pd,
fp_exception_field_type ∗ps);
void decimal_to_quadruple(quadruple ∗px, decimal_mode ∗pm, decimal_record ∗pd,
fp_exception_field_type ∗ps);
MT-LEVEL
MT-Safe
DESCRIPTION
The decimal_to_floating() functions convert the decimal record at ∗pd into a floating-point value at ∗px, observing the modes specified in ∗pm and setting exceptions in ∗ps. If there are no IEEE exceptions, ∗ps will be zero.
pd->sign and pd->fpclass are always taken into account. pd->exponent, pd->ds and pd->ndigits are used when pd->fpclass is fp_normal or fp_subnormal. In these cases pd->ds must contain one or more ascii digits followed by a NULL and pd->ndigits is assumed to be the length of the string pd->ds. Notice that for efficiency reasons, the assumption that pd->ndigits == strlen(pd->ds) is NEVER verified.
On output, ∗px is set to a correctly rounded approximation to
(pd->sign)∗(pd->ds)∗10∗∗(pd->exponent)
Thus if pd->exponent == −2 and pd->ds == "1234", ∗px will get 12.34 rounded to storage precision. pd->ds cannot have more than DECIMAL_STRING_LENGTH-1 significant digits because one character is used to terminate the string with a NULL. If pd->more != 0 on input then additional nonzero digits follow those in pd->ds; fp_inexact is set accordingly on output in ∗ps.
∗px is correctly rounded according to the IEEE rounding modes in pm->rd. ∗ps is set to contain fp_inexact, fp_underflow, or fp_overflow if any of these arise.
pm->df and pm->ndigits are not used.
strtod(3C), scanf(3S), fscanf(3S), and sscanf(3S) all use decimal_to_double().
SEE ALSO
fscanf(3S), scanf(3S), sscanf(3S), strtod(3C)
SunOS 5.5.1 — Last change: 23 Feb 1993