These originally checked for expected ± EPSILON as logged, but since
commit 880c6939 they check for expected ± max_err, where max_err may
need to be greater than EPSILON for very large expected results like
the ones in exp_regularCases().
Also, EPSILON is so small that the default precision of the %f format
(6 decimal places) would never actually have shown its effect, so log
it in scientific notation instead.
Fixes: 880c6939 "testautomation_math: do relative comparison + more precise correct trigonometric values"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
While looking at the other tests in this file, I noticed that instead
of checking for a result in the range of expected ± FLT_EPSILON as I
would have expected, these tests would accept any result strictly less
than expected + FLT_EPSILON, for example a wrong result that is very
large and negative. This is presumably not what was intended, so add
the SDL_fabs() that I assume was meant to be here.
Fixes: 474c8d00 "testautomation: don't do float equality tests"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
If the magnitude of the expected result is small, then we can safely
assume that the actual calculated result matches it to 10 decimal
places.
However, if the magnitude is very large, as it is for some of our exp()
tests, then 10 decimal places represents an unrealistically high level
of precision, for example 24 decimal digits for the test that is
expected to return approximately 6.6e14. IEEE 754 floating point only
has a precision of about 16 decimal digits, causing test failure on
x86 compilers that use an i387 80-bit extended-precision register for
the result and therefore get a slightly different answer.
To avoid this, scale the required precision with the magnitude of the
expected result, so that we accept a maximum error of either 10 decimal
places or 1 part in 1e10, whichever is greater.
[smcv: Added longer commit message explaining why we need this]
(cherry picked from commit 880c69392ae10c726fc97f17b6e5e2173f70b62f)
In the Steam Runtime 1 'scout' environment, when compiling for i386
using the default gcc-4.6, Exp(34.125) matches the desired value to the
precision shown in the log (6 decimal places) but is not an exact match
for the desired value.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
We can't rely on irrational numbers like pi being represented exactly,
particularly when compiling for i386, where the i387 floating-point
interface carries out calculations in registers that have higher
precision than the actual double-precision variable. The 1980s were a
strange time.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/8311
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This function is useful for accumulating relative mouse motion if you want to only handle whole pixel movement.
e.g.
static float dx_frac, dy_frac;
float dx, dy;
/* Accumulate new motion with previous sub-pixel motion */
dx = event.motion.xrel + dx_frac;
dy = event.motion.yrel + dy_frac;
/* Split the integral and fractional motion, dx and dy will contain whole pixel deltas */
dx_frac = SDL_modff(dx, &dx);
dy_frac = SDL_modff(dy, &dy);
if (dx != 0.0f || dy != 0.0f) {
...
}
I updated .clang-format and ran clang-format 14 over the src and test directories to standardize the code base.
In general I let clang-format have it's way, and added markup to prevent formatting of code that would break or be completely unreadable if formatted.
The script I ran for the src directory is added as build-scripts/clang-format-src.sh
This fixes:
#6592#6593#6594
I ran this script in the include directory:
```sh
sed -i '' -e 's,#include "\(SDL.*\)",#include <SDL3/\1>,' *.h
```
I ran this script in the src directory:
```sh
for i in ../include/SDL3/SDL*.h
do hdr=$(basename $i)
if [ x"$(echo $hdr | egrep 'SDL_main|SDL_name|SDL_test|SDL_syswm|SDL_opengl|SDL_egl|SDL_vulkan')" != x ]; then
find . -type f -exec sed -i '' -e 's,#include "\('$hdr'\)",#include <SDL3/\1>,' {} \;
else
find . -type f -exec sed -i '' -e '/#include "'$hdr'"/d' {} \;
fi
done
```
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6575
Instead of using `trunc` to check the first ten digits, inexact test now
relies on an epsilon defining an acceptable range for the expected
result to be in.