Convert decimal number to rational: Difference between revisions
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=={{header|jq}}== |
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'''Works with [[#jq|jq]]''' (*) |
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'''Works with gojq, the Go implementation of jq''' |
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The following definition of `number_to_r` can be used for JSON numbers in general, as illustrated by the examples. |
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This entry assumes the availability |
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of two functions (`r/2` and `power/1`) as defined in |
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the "rational" module |
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at [[Arithmetic/Rational#jq]], which also provides a definition |
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for `rpp/0`, a pretty-printer used in the examples. |
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(*) With the caveat that the C implementation of jq does not support unlimited-precision integer arithmetic. |
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<lang jq># include "rational"; # a reminder that r/2 and power/1 are required |
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# Input: any JSON number, not only a decimal |
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# Output: a rational, constructed using r/2 |
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# Requires power/1 (to take advantage of gojq's support for integer arithmetic) |
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# and r/2 (for rational number constructor) |
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def number_to_r: |
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# input: a decimal string |
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# $in - either null or the original input |
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# $e - the integer exponent of the original number, or 0 |
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def dtor($in; $e): |
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index(".") as $ix |
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| if $in and ($ix == null) then $in |
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else (if $ix then sub("[.]"; "") else . end | tonumber) as $n |
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| (if $ix then ((length - ($ix+1)) - $e) else - $e end) as $p |
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| if $p >= 0 |
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then r( $n; 10|power($p)) |
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else r( $n * (10|power(-$p)); 1) |
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end |
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end; |
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. as $in |
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| tostring |
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| if (test("[Ee]")|not) then dtor($in; 0) |
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else capture("^(?<s>[^eE]*)[Ee](?<e>.*$)") |
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| (.e | if length > 0 then tonumber else 0 end) as $e |
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| .s | dtor(null; $e) |
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end ;</lang> |
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'''Examples''' |
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<lang jq>0.9054054, |
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0.518518, |
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0.75, |
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1e308 |
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| "\(.) → \(number_to_r | rpp)"</lang> |
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{{out}} |
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<pre> |
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0.9054054 → 4527027 // 5000000 |
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0.518518 → 259259 // 500000 |
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0.75 → 3 // 4 |
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1e+308 → 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 // 1 |
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</pre> |
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=={{header|Julia}}== |
=={{header|Julia}}== |
Revision as of 05:47, 31 October 2021
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
The task is to write a program to transform a decimal number into a fraction in lowest terms.
It is not always possible to do this exactly. For instance, while rational numbers can be converted to decimal representation, some of them need an infinite number of digits to be represented exactly in decimal form. Namely, repeating decimals such as 1/3 = 0.333...
Because of this, the following fractions cannot be obtained (reliably) unless the language has some way of representing repeating decimals:
- 67 / 74 = 0.9(054) = 0.9054054...
- 14 / 27 = 0.(518) = 0.518518...
Acceptable output:
- 0.9054054 → 4527027 / 5000000
- 0.518518 → 259259 / 500000
Finite decimals are of course no problem:
- 0.75 → 3 / 4
11l
<lang 11l>T Rational
Int numerator Int denominator
F (numerator, denominator) .numerator = numerator .denominator = denominator
F String() I .denominator == 1 R String(.numerator) E R .numerator‘//’(.denominator)
F rationalize(x, tol = 1e-12)
V xx = x V flagNeg = xx < 0.0 I flagNeg xx = -xx I xx < 1e-10 R Rational(0, 1) I abs(xx - round(xx)) < tol R Rational(Int(xx), 1) V a = 0 V b = 1 V c = Int(ceil(xx)) V d = 1 V aux1 = 7FFF'FFFF I/ 2 L c < aux1 & d < aux1 V aux2 = (Float(a) + Float(c)) / (Float(b) + Float(d)) I abs(xx - aux2) < tol L.break I xx > aux2 a += c b += d E c += a d += b V g = gcd(a + c, b + d) I flagNeg R Rational(-(a + c) I/ g, (b + d) I/ g) E R Rational((a + c) I/ g, (b + d) I/ g)
print(rationalize(0.9054054054)) print(rationalize(0.9054054054, 0.0001)) print(rationalize(0.5185185185)) print(rationalize(0.5185185185, 0.0001)) print(rationalize(0.75)) print(rationalize(0.1428571428, 0.001)) print(rationalize(35.000)) print(rationalize(35.001)) print(rationalize(0.9)) print(rationalize(0.99)) print(rationalize(0.909)) print(rationalize(0.909, 0.001))</lang>
- Output:
1910136854//2109703391 67//74 983902907//1897527035 14//27 3//4 1//7 35 35001//1000 9//10 99//100 909//1000 10//11
Ada
Specification of a procedure Real_To_Rational, which is searching for the best approximation of a real number. The procedure is generic. I.e., you can instantiate it by your favorite "Real" type (Float, Long_Float, ...).
<lang Ada>generic
type Real is digits <>;
procedure Real_To_Rational(R: Real;
Bound: Positive; Nominator: out Integer; Denominator: out Positive);</lang>
The implementation (just brute-force search for the best approximation with Denominator less or equal Bound):
<lang Ada>procedure Real_To_Rational (R: Real;
Bound: Positive; Nominator: out Integer; Denominator: out Positive) is Error: Real; Best: Positive := 1; Best_Error: Real := Real'Last;
begin
if R = 0.0 then Nominator := 0; Denominator := 1; return; elsif R < 0.0 then Real_To_Rational(-R, Bound, Nominator, Denominator); Nominator := - Nominator; return; else for I in 1 .. Bound loop Error := abs(Real(I) * R - Real'Rounding(Real(I) * R)); if Error < Best_Error then Best := I; Best_Error := Error; end if; end loop; end if; Denominator := Best; Nominator := Integer(Real'Rounding(Real(Denominator) * R));
end Real_To_Rational;</lang>
The main program, called "Convert_Decimal_To_Rational", reads reals from the standard input until 0.0. It outputs progressively better rational approximations of the reals, where "progressively better" means a larger Bound for the Denominator:
<lang Ada>with Ada.Text_IO; With Real_To_Rational;
procedure Convert_Decimal_To_Rational is
type My_Real is new Long_Float; -- change this for another "Real" type
package FIO is new Ada.Text_IO.Float_IO(My_Real); procedure R2R is new Real_To_Rational(My_Real);
Nom, Denom: Integer; R: My_Real;
begin
loop Ada.Text_IO.New_Line; FIO.Get(R); FIO.Put(R, Fore => 2, Aft => 9, Exp => 0); exit when R = 0.0; for I in 0 .. 4 loop R2R(R, 10**I, Nom, Denom); Ada.Text_IO.Put(" " & Integer'Image(Nom) & " /" & Integer'Image(Denom)); end loop; end loop;
end Convert_Decimal_To_Rational; </lang>
Finally, the output (reading the input from a file):
> ./convert_decimal_to_rational < input.txt 0.750000000 1 / 1 3 / 4 3 / 4 3 / 4 3 / 4 0.518518000 1 / 1 1 / 2 14 / 27 14 / 27 14 / 27 0.905405400 1 / 1 9 / 10 67 / 74 67 / 74 67 / 74 0.142857143 0 / 1 1 / 7 1 / 7 1 / 7 1 / 7 3.141592654 3 / 1 22 / 7 22 / 7 355 / 113 355 / 113 2.718281828 3 / 1 19 / 7 193 / 71 1457 / 536 25946 / 9545 -0.423310825 0 / 1 -3 / 7 -11 / 26 -69 / 163 -1253 / 2960 31.415926536 31 / 1 157 / 5 377 / 12 3550 / 113 208696 / 6643 0.000000000
AppleScript
<lang applescript>on run
script ratioString -- Using a tolerance epsilon of 1/10000 on |λ|(x) showRatio(approxRatio(1.0E-4, x)) end |λ| end script map(ratioString, ¬ {0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75}) --> {"67/74", "14/27", "3/4"}
end run
-- approxRatio :: Real -> Real -> Ratio
on approxRatio(epsilon, n)
if {real, integer} contains (class of epsilon) and 0 < epsilon then set e to epsilon else set e to 1 / 10000 end if script gcde on |λ|(e, x, y) script _gcd on |λ|(a, b) if b < e then a else |λ|(b, a mod b) end if end |λ| end script |λ|(abs(x), abs(y)) of _gcd end |λ| end script set c to |λ|(e, 1, n) of gcde Ratio((n div c), (1 div c))
end approxRatio
-- Ratio :: Int -> Int -> Ratio
on Ratio(n, d)
{type:"Ratio", n:n, d:d}
end Ratio
-- showRatio :: Ratio -> String
on showRatio(r)
(n of r as string) & "/" & (d of r as string)
end showRatio
-- GENERIC FUNCTIONS ---------------------------------------------
-- abs :: Num -> Num on abs(x)
if 0 > x then -x else x end if
end abs
-- Lift 2nd class handler function into 1st class script wrapper
-- mReturn :: First-class m => (a -> b) -> m (a -> b)
on mReturn(f)
if class of f is script then f else script property |λ| : f end script end if
end mReturn
-- map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b] on map(f, xs)
tell mReturn(f) set lng to length of xs set lst to {} repeat with i from 1 to lng set end of lst to |λ|(item i of xs, i, xs) end repeat return lst end tell
end map</lang>
- Output:
{"67/74", "14/27", "3/4"}
AutoHotkey
<lang AutoHotkey> Array := []
inputbox, string, Enter Number stringsplit, string, string, . if ( string1 = 0 ) string1 = loop, parse, string, . if A_index = 2 loop, parse, A_loopfield Array[A_index] := A_loopfield, k := A_index if (k = 1) { numerator := Array[1] Denominator := 10 goto label } Original1 := K To_rn := floor(k/2) M_M := k - To_rn Original2 := k - To_rn loop { loop, % To_rn { Check1 .= Array[k] Check2 .= Array[M_M] k-- m_M-- } if ( check1 = check2 ) { ;~ process beginsTO check;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; loop, % To_rn nines .= 9 loop, % k - TO_rn Zeroes .= 0 loop % k - TO_rn Minus .= Array[A_index] loop % k Plus .= Array[A_index] if ( minus = "" ) minus := 0 Numerator := Plus - minus Denominator := Nines . Zeroes ;;;;;;;;;;;;;HCF goto, label } Check1 = check2 = k := Original1 m_M := original2 + A_index TO_rn-- if ( to_rn = 0 ) { zeroes = loop % original1 zeroes .= 0 Denominator := 1 . zeroes numerator := string2 goto, label } } esc::Exitapp label: Index := 2 loop { if (mod(denominator, numerator) = 0 ) HCF := numerator if ( index = floor(numerator/2) ) break if ( mod(numerator, index) = 0 ) && ( mod(denominator, index) = 0 ) { HCF = %index% index++ } else index++ } if ( HCF = "" ) Ans := numerator "/" Denominator else Ans := floor(numerator/HCF) "/" floor(Denominator/HCF) MsgBox % String . " -> " . String1 . " " . Ans reload
</lang>
0.9054054 -> 67/74 0.518518 -> 14/27 0.75 -> 3/4
Bracmat
<lang bracmat>( ( exact
= integerPart decimalPart z . @(!arg:?integerPart "." ?decimalPart) & !integerPart + ( @( !decimalPart : (? ((%@:~0) ?:?decimalPart)) [?z ) & !decimalPart*10^(-1*!z) | 0 ) | !arg )
& ( approximation
= integerPart firstDecimals repeatingDecimals , x y z z-y x-y numerator denominator . @( !arg : ?integerPart "." [?x ?firstDecimals ?repeatingDecimals [?y !repeatingDecimals [?z ) & !z+-1*!y:?z-y & !x+-1*!y:?x-y & 10:?numerator:?denominator & ( !z-y:0&0:?repeatingDecimals | 9:?denominator & whl ' ( !z+-1:>!y:?z & !numerator*10:?numerator & !denominator*10+9:?denominator ) & @(!repeatingDecimals:? #?repeatingDecimals) ) & ( @(!firstDecimals:? #?firstDecimals) | 0:?firstDecimals ) & !integerPart + !firstDecimals*10^(!x-y+!z-y) + !numerator*!denominator^-1*!repeatingDecimals*10^!x-y )
& "0.9054054054"
"0.5185185185" "0.75" "0.905405400" "0.1428571428" "35.000" "35.001" "0.00000000001" "0.000001000001" "0.9" "0.99" "0.909" "0.9090" "0.90909" : ?decs
& whl
' ( !decs:%?dec ?decs & approximation$!dec:?approx & out $ ( !dec "=" (exact$!dec:?precise) ( !approx:!precise& | str$("(approx. " !approx ")") ) ) )
);</lang> Output:
0.9054054054 = 4527027027/5000000000 (approx. 67/74) 0.5185185185 = 1037037037/2000000000 (approx. 14/27) 0.75 = 3/4 0.905405400 = 4527027/5000000 0.1428571428 = 357142857/2500000000 35.000 = 35 35.001 = 35001/1000 0.00000000001 = 1/100000000000 0.000001000001 = 1000001/1000000000000 (approx. 1/999999) 0.9 = 9/10 0.99 = 99/100 (approx. 1) 0.909 = 909/1000 0.9090 = 909/1000 (approx. 10/11) 0.90909 = 90909/100000 (approx. 10/11)
C
Since the intention of the task giver is entirely unclear, here's another version of best rational approximation of a floating point number. It's somewhat more rigorous than the Perl version below, but is still not quite complete.<lang C>#include <stdio.h>
- include <stdlib.h>
- include <math.h>
- include <stdint.h>
/* f : number to convert.
* num, denom: returned parts of the rational. * md: max denominator value. Note that machine floating point number * has a finite resolution (10e-16 ish for 64 bit double), so specifying * a "best match with minimal error" is often wrong, because one can * always just retrieve the significand and return that divided by * 2**52, which is in a sense accurate, but generally not very useful: * 1.0/7.0 would be "2573485501354569/18014398509481984", for example. */
void rat_approx(double f, int64_t md, int64_t *num, int64_t *denom) { /* a: continued fraction coefficients. */ int64_t a, h[3] = { 0, 1, 0 }, k[3] = { 1, 0, 0 }; int64_t x, d, n = 1; int i, neg = 0;
if (md <= 1) { *denom = 1; *num = (int64_t) f; return; }
if (f < 0) { neg = 1; f = -f; }
while (f != floor(f)) { n <<= 1; f *= 2; } d = f;
/* continued fraction and check denominator each step */ for (i = 0; i < 64; i++) { a = n ? d / n : 0; if (i && !a) break;
x = d; d = n; n = x % n;
x = a; if (k[1] * a + k[0] >= md) { x = (md - k[0]) / k[1]; if (x * 2 >= a || k[1] >= md) i = 65; else break; }
h[2] = x * h[1] + h[0]; h[0] = h[1]; h[1] = h[2]; k[2] = x * k[1] + k[0]; k[0] = k[1]; k[1] = k[2]; } *denom = k[1]; *num = neg ? -h[1] : h[1]; }
int main() { int i; int64_t d, n; double f;
printf("f = %16.14f\n", f = 1.0/7); for (i = 1; i <= 20000000; i *= 16) { printf("denom <= %d: ", i); rat_approx(f, i, &n, &d); printf("%lld/%lld\n", n, d); }
printf("\nf = %16.14f\n", f = atan2(1,1) * 4); for (i = 1; i <= 20000000; i *= 16) { printf("denom <= %d: ", i); rat_approx(f, i, &n, &d); printf("%lld/%lld\n", n, d); }
return 0; }</lang>Output:<lang>f = 0.14285714285714 denom <= 1: 0/1 denom <= 16: 1/7 denom <= 256: 1/7 denom <= 4096: 1/7 denom <= 65536: 1/7 denom <= 1048576: 1/7 denom <= 16777216: 1/7
f = 3.14159265358979 denom <= 1: 3/1 denom <= 16: 22/7 denom <= 256: 355/113 denom <= 4096: 355/113 denom <= 65536: 104348/33215 denom <= 1048576: 3126535/995207 denom <= 16777216: 47627751/15160384</lang>
C#
<lang csharp>using System; using System.Text;
namespace RosettaDecimalToFraction {
public class Fraction { public Int64 Numerator; public Int64 Denominator; public Fraction(double f, Int64 MaximumDenominator = 4096) { /* Translated from the C version. */ /* a: continued fraction coefficients. */ Int64 a; var h = new Int64[3] { 0, 1, 0 }; var k = new Int64[3] { 1, 0, 0 }; Int64 x, d, n = 1; int i, neg = 0;
if (MaximumDenominator <= 1) { Denominator = 1; Numerator = (Int64)f; return; }
if (f < 0) { neg = 1; f = -f; }
while (f != Math.Floor(f)) { n <<= 1; f *= 2; } d = (Int64)f;
/* continued fraction and check denominator each step */ for (i = 0; i < 64; i++) { a = (n != 0) ? d / n : 0; if ((i != 0) && (a == 0)) break;
x = d; d = n; n = x % n;
x = a; if (k[1] * a + k[0] >= MaximumDenominator) { x = (MaximumDenominator - k[0]) / k[1]; if (x * 2 >= a || k[1] >= MaximumDenominator) i = 65; else break; }
h[2] = x * h[1] + h[0]; h[0] = h[1]; h[1] = h[2]; k[2] = x * k[1] + k[0]; k[0] = k[1]; k[1] = k[2]; } Denominator = k[1]; Numerator = neg != 0 ? -h[1] : h[1]; } public override string ToString() { return string.Format("{0} / {1}", Numerator, Denominator); } } class Program { static void Main(string[] args) { Console.OutputEncoding = UTF8Encoding.UTF8; foreach (double d in new double[] { 0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75, 0.4285714, 0.833333, 0.90909, 3.14159265358979, 2.7182818284590451 }) { var f = new Fraction(d, d >= 2 ? 65536 : 4096); Console.WriteLine("{0,20} → {1}", d, f);
} } }
} </lang>
- Output:
0.9054054 → 67 / 74 0.518518 → 14 / 27 0.75 → 3 / 4 0.4285714 → 3 / 7 0.833333 → 5 / 6 0.90909 → 10 / 11 3.14159265358979 → 104348 / 33215 2.71828182845905 → 49171 / 18089
Clojure
user=> (rationalize 0.1) 1/10 user=> (rationalize 0.9054054) 4527027/5000000 user=> (rationalize 0.518518) 259259/500000 user=> (rationalize Math/PI) 3141592653589793/1000000000000000
Common Lisp
There are two functions for converting decimals to rationals: rational returns a rational that is mathematically equal in value to the decimal and rationalize returns a rational that approximates the decimal to the accuracy of the underlying floating-point representation.
> (rational 0.9054054) 7595091/8388608 > (rationalize 0.9054054) 67/74 > (= (rational 0.9054054) 0.9054054) T > (= (rationalize 0.9054054) 0.9054054) NIL > (rational .518518) 1087411/2097152 > (rationalize .518518) 33279/64181 > (rational .5185185) 8699297/16777216 > (rationalize .5185185) 14/27 > (rational .75) 3/4 > (rationalize .75) 3/4
D
<lang d>import std.stdio, std.math, std.string, std.typecons;
alias Fraction = Tuple!(int,"nominator", uint,"denominator");
Fraction real2Rational(in real r, in uint bound) /*pure*/ nothrow {
if (r == 0.0) { return Fraction(0, 1); } else if (r < 0.0) { auto result = real2Rational(-r, bound); result.nominator = -result.nominator; return result; } else { uint best = 1; real bestError = real.max;
foreach (i; 1 .. bound + 1) { // round is not pure. immutable real error = abs(i * r - round(i * r)); if (error < bestError) { best = i; bestError = error; } }
return Fraction(cast(int)round(best * r), best); }
}
void main() {
immutable tests = [ 0.750000000, 0.518518000, 0.905405400, 0.142857143, 3.141592654, 2.718281828, -0.423310825, 31.415926536];
foreach (r; tests) { writef("%8.9f ", r); foreach (i; 0 .. 5) writef(" %d/%d", real2Rational(r, 10 ^^ i).tupleof); writeln(); }
}</lang>
- Output:
0.750000000 1/1 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 0.518518000 1/1 1/2 14/27 14/27 14/27 37031/71417 0.905405400 1/1 9/10 67/74 67/74 67/74 67/74 0.142857143 0/1 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 3.141592654 3/1 22/7 22/7 355/113 355/113 104348/33215 2.718281828 3/1 19/7 193/71 1457/536 25946/9545 222630/81901 -0.423310825 0/1 -3/7 -11/26 -69/163 -1253/2960 -10093/23843 31.415926536 31/1 157/5 377/12 3550/113 208696/6643 2918194/92889
Delphi
Thanks Rudy Velthuis for Velthuis.BigRationals and Velthuis.BigDecimals library[1].
<lang Delphi> program Convert_decimal_number_to_rational;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
uses
Velthuis.BigRationals, Velthuis.BigDecimals;
const
Tests: TArray<string> = ['0.9054054', '0.518518', '0.75'];
var
Rational: BigRational; Decimal: BigDecimal;
begin
for var test in Tests do begin Decimal := test; Rational := Decimal; Writeln(test, ' = ', Rational.ToString); end; Readln;
end.</lang>
EchoLisp
The rationalize function uses a Stern-Brocot tree [2] to find the best rational approximation of an inexact (floating point) number, for a given precision. The inexact->exact function returns a rational approximation for the default precision 0.0001 . <lang scheme> (exact->inexact 67/74)
→ 0.9054054054054054
(inexact->exact 0.9054054054054054)
→ 67/74
(rationalize 0.7978723404255319)
→ 75/94
- finding rational approximations of PI
(for ((ε (in-range -1 -15 -1))) (writeln ( format "precision:10^%d %t PI = %d" ε
(rationalize PI (expt 10 e)))))
"precision:10^-1 PI = 16/5" "precision:10^-2 PI = 22/7" ;;🎩 "precision:10^-3 PI = 201/64" "precision:10^-4 PI = 333/106" "precision:10^-5 PI = 355/113" ;; 🎩 🎩 "precision:10^-6 PI = 355/113" "precision:10^-7 PI = 75948/24175" "precision:10^-8 PI = 100798/32085" "precision:10^-9 PI = 103993/33102" "precision:10^-10 PI = 312689/99532" "precision:10^-11 PI = 833719/265381" "precision:10^-12 PI = 4272943/1360120" "precision:10^-13 PI = 5419351/1725033" "precision:10^-14 PI = 58466453/18610450" </lang>
Factor
<lang factor>USING: kernel math.floating-point prettyprint ;
0.9054054 0.518518 0.75 [ double>ratio . ] tri@</lang>
- Output:
4077583422059235/4503599627370496 2335197471584895/4503599627370496 3/4
Forth
<lang Forth> \ Brute force search, optimized to search only within integer bounds surrounding target \ Forth 200x compliant
- RealToRational ( float_target int_denominator_limit -- numerator denominator )
{: f: thereal denlimit | realscale numtor denom neg? f: besterror f: temperror :} 0 to numtor 0 to denom 9999999e to besterror \ very large error that will surely be improved upon thereal F0< to neg? \ save sign for later thereal FABS to thereal
thereal FTRUNC f>s 1+ to realscale \ realscale helps set integer bounds around target denlimit 1+ 1 ?DO \ search through possible denominators ( 1 to denlimit)
I realscale * I realscale 1- * ?DO \ search within integer limits bounding the real I s>f J s>f F/ \ e.g. for 3.1419e search only between 3 and 4 thereal F- FABS to temperror temperror besterror F< IF temperror to besterror I to numtor J to denom THEN LOOP
LOOP
neg? IF numtor NEGATE to numtor THEN numtor denom
(run) 1.618033988e 100 RealToRational swap . . 144 89 3.14159e 1000 RealToRational swap . . 355 113 2.71828e 1000 RealToRational swap . . 1264 465 0.9054054e 100 RealToRational swap . . 67 74 </lang>
Fortran
This sort of calculation works best in base ten and with an input scheme that recognises a protocol for specifying that the decimal value has a recurring sequence, whereupon the methods taught in school could be employed. Such a protocol often conflicts with presenting a digit sequence with the last digit correctly rounded. Although many early computers worked in base ten, these days a binary base is usual, be it 2, 4, 8, or 16. Alas, five is not a factor of two nor any of its powers, and many decimal fractions, even a brief one such as 0·1, convert to a recurring sequence in binary so for example, 10·15 is in binary 1010·0010011001100110011... However, 203/20 when evaluated in binary floating-point will generate the same binary sequence as 10·15, granted that the compiler does its arithmetic correctly. Nevertheless, such a decimal value is not the value that a binary computer will work with, except for restricted fractions such as 0·5, 0·25, 0·75, and so forth up to the precision of the arithmetic.
Rather than engage in fancy schemes, here are two "brute force" methods. The first simply multiplies the value by a large power of ten, then casts out common factors in P/Q = x*1000000000/100000000. But if the best value for Q involves factors other than two and five, this won't work well. The second method is to jiggle either P or Q upwards depending on whether P/Q is smaller or larger than X, reporting improvements as it goes. Once beyond small numbers there are many small improvements to be found, so only those much better than the previous best are reported. Loosely speaking, the number of digits correct in good values of P/Q should be the sum of the number of digits in P and Q, and more still for happy fits, but a factor of eight suffices to suppress the rabble. Thus for Pi, the famous 22/7 and 355/113 appear as desired. Later pairs use lots more digits without a surprise hit, except for the short decimal sequence which comes out as 314159/100000 that reconstitutes the given decimal fraction exactly. Which is not a good approximation for Pi, and its pairs diverge from those of the more accurate value. In other words, one must assess the precision of the given value and not be distracted by the spurious precision offered by the larger P/Q pairs, so for 3·14159 with six digits, there is little point in going further than 355/113 - with their six digits. Contrariwise, if a P/Q with few digits matches many more digits of the given number, then a source rational number can be suspected. But if given just a few digits, such as 0·518 (or 0·519, when rounded), 13/25 could be just as likely a source number as 14/27 which is further away.
The source uses the MODULE facility of F90 merely to avoid the annoyance of having to declare the type of integer function GCD. The T ("tab") format code is employed to facilitate the alignment of output, given that P/Q is presented with I0 format so that there are no spaces (as in " 22/ 7" for example), the latter being standard in F90 but an extension in earlier Fortrans. <lang Fortran> MODULE PQ !Plays with some integer arithmetic.
INTEGER MSG !Output unit number. CONTAINS !One good routine. INTEGER FUNCTION GCD(I,J) !Greatest common divisor. INTEGER I,J !Of these two integers. INTEGER N,M,R !Workers. N = MAX(I,J) !Since I don't want to damage I or J, M = MIN(I,J) !These copies might as well be the right way around. 1 R = MOD(N,M) !Divide N by M to get the remainder R. IF (R.GT.0) THEN !Remainder zero? N = M !No. Descend a level. M = R !M-multiplicity has been removed from N. IF (R .GT. 1) GO TO 1 !No point dividing by one. END IF !If R = 0, M divides N. GCD = M !There we are. END FUNCTION GCD !Euclid lives on!
SUBROUTINE RATIONAL10(X)!By contrast, this is rather crude. DOUBLE PRECISION X !The number. DOUBLE PRECISION R !Its latest rational approach. INTEGER P,Q !For R = P/Q. INTEGER F,WHACK !Assistants. PARAMETER (WHACK = 10**8) !The rescale... P = X*WHACK + 0.5 !Multiply by WHACK/WHACK = 1 and round to integer. Q = WHACK !Thus compute X/1, sortof. F = GCD(P,Q) !Perhaps there is a common factor. P = P/F !Divide it out. Q = Q/F !For a proper rational number. R = DBLE(P)/DBLE(Q) !So, where did we end up? WRITE (MSG,1) P,Q,X - R,WHACK !Details. 1 FORMAT ("x - ",I0,"/",I0,T28," = ",F18.14, 1 " via multiplication by ",I0) END SUBROUTINE RATIONAL10 !Enough of this.
SUBROUTINE RATIONAL(X) !Use brute force in a different way. DOUBLE PRECISION X !The number. DOUBLE PRECISION R,E,BEST !Assistants. INTEGER P,Q !For R = P/Q. INTEGER TRY,F !Floundering. P = 1 + X !Prevent P = 0. Q = 1 !So, X/1, sortof. BEST = X*6 !A largeish value for the first try. DO TRY = 1,10000000 !Pound away. R = DBLE(P)/DBLE(Q) !The current approximation. E = X - R !Deviation. IF (ABS(E) .LE. BEST) THEN !Significantly better than before? BEST = ABS(E)*0.125 !Yes. Demand eightfold improvement to notice. F = GCD(P,Q) !We may land on a multiple. IF (BEST.LT.0.1D0) WRITE (MSG,1) P/F,Q/F,E !Skip early floundering. 1 FORMAT ("x - ",I0,"/",I0,T28," = ",F18.14) !Try to align columns. IF (F.NE.1) WRITE (MSG,*) "Common factor!",F !A surprise! IF (E.EQ.0) EXIT !Perhaps we landed a direct hit? END IF !So much for possible announcements. IF (E.GT.0) THEN !Is R too small? P = P + CEILING(E*Q) !Yes. Make P bigger by the shortfall. ELSE IF (E .LT. 0) THEN !But perhaps R is too big? Q = Q + 1 !If so, use a smaller interval. END IF !So much for adjustments. END DO !Try again. END SUBROUTINE RATIONAL !Limited integers, limited sense.
SUBROUTINE RATIONALISE(X,WOT) !Run the tests. DOUBLE PRECISION X !The value. CHARACTER*(*) WOT !Some blather. WRITE (MSG,*) X,WOT !Explanations can help. CALL RATIONAL10(X) !Try a crude method. CALL RATIONAL(X) !Try a laborious method. WRITE (MSG,*) !Space off. END SUBROUTINE RATIONALISE !That wasn't much fun. END MODULE PQ !But computer time is cheap.
PROGRAM APPROX USE PQ DOUBLE PRECISION PI,E MSG = 6 WRITE (MSG,*) "Rational numbers near to decimal values." WRITE (MSG,*) PI = 1 !Thus get a double precision conatant. PI = 4*ATAN(PI) !That will determine the precision of ATAN. E = DEXP(1.0D0) !Rather than blabber on about 1 in double precision. CALL RATIONALISE(0.1D0,"1/10 Repeating in binary..") CALL RATIONALISE(3.14159D0,"Pi approx.") CALL RATIONALISE(PI,"Pi approximated better.") CALL RATIONALISE(E,"e: rational approximations aren't much use.") CALL RATIONALISE(10.15D0,"Exact in decimal, recurring in binary.") WRITE (MSG,*) WRITE (MSG,*) "Variations on 67/74" CALL RATIONALISE(0.9054D0,"67/74 = 0·9(054) repeating in base 10") CALL RATIONALISE(0.9054054D0,"Two repeats.") CALL RATIONALISE(0.9054054054D0,"Three repeats.") WRITE (MSG,*) WRITE (MSG,*) "Variations on 14/27" CALL RATIONALISE(0.518D0,"14/27 = 0·(518) repeating in decimal.") CALL RATIONALISE(0.519D0,"Rounded.") CALL RATIONALISE(0.518518D0,"Two repeats, truncated.") CALL RATIONALISE(0.518519D0,"Two repeats, rounded.") END</lang>
Some examples. Each rational value is followed by X - P/Q. Notice that 0·(518) repeating, presented as 0·518518, is not correctly rounded.
Rational numbers near to decimal values. 0.100000000000000 1/10 Repeating in binary.. x - 1/10 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/2 = -0.40000000000000 x - 1/7 = -0.04285714285714 x - 1/10 = 0.00000000000000 3.14159000000000 Pi approx. x - 314159/100000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 16/5 = -0.05841000000000 x - 22/7 = -0.00126714285714 x - 355/113 = -0.00000292035398 x - 9563/3044 = -0.00000001314060 x - 85712/27283 = -0.00000000109959 x - 238010/75761 = -0.00000000013199 x - 314159/100000 = 0.00000000000000 3.14159265358979 Pi approximated better. x - 62831853/20000000 = 0.00000000358979 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 16/5 = -0.05840734641021 x - 22/7 = -0.00126448926735 x - 355/113 = -0.00000026676419 x - 104348/33215 = -0.00000000033163 x - 312689/99532 = -0.00000000002914 x - 1146408/364913 = -0.00000000000161 x - 5419351/1725033 = -0.00000000000002 2.71828182845905 e: rational approximations aren't much use. x - 271828183/100000000 = -0.00000000154095 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 3/1 = -0.28171817154095 x - 11/4 = -0.03171817154095 x - 49/18 = -0.00394039376318 x - 87/32 = -0.00046817154095 x - 193/71 = -0.00002803069588 x - 1457/536 = -0.00000175363051 x - 9620/3539 = -0.00000017210609 x - 23225/8544 = -0.00000000674695 x - 49171/18089 = -0.00000000027665 x - 566827/208524 = -0.00000000001154 x - 3820276/1405401 = -0.00000000000130 x - 11411657/4198114 = -0.00000000000012 10.1500000000000 Exact in decimal, recurring in binary. x - 203/20 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 41/4 = -0.10000000000000 x - 132/13 = -0.00384615384615 x - 203/20 = 0.00000000000000 Variations on 67/74 0.905400000000000 67/74 = 0·9(054) repeating in base 10 x - 4527/5000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.09460000000000 x - 9/10 = 0.00540000000000 x - 19/21 = 0.00063809523810 x - 67/74 = -0.00000540540541 x - 2029/2241 = 0.00000062472111 x - 4527/5000 = 0.00000000000000 0.905405400000000 Two repeats. x - 4527027/5000000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.09459460000000 x - 9/10 = 0.00540540000000 x - 19/21 = 0.00064349523810 x - 67/74 = -0.00000000540541 x - 2012029/2222241 = 0.00000000067562 x - 2228707/2461557 = 0.00000000008442 x - 2259125/2495153 = 0.00000000001050 x - 2263011/2499445 = 0.00000000000120 x - 2263480/2499963 = 0.00000000000008 x - 4527027/5000000 = 0.00000000000000 0.905405405400000 Three repeats. x - 90540541/100000000 = -0.00000000460000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.09459459460000 x - 9/10 = 0.00540540540000 x - 19/21 = 0.00064350063810 x - 67/74 = -0.00000000000541 Variations on 14/27 0.518000000000000 14/27 = 0·(518) repeating in decimal. x - 259/500 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.48200000000000 x - 1/2 = 0.01800000000000 x - 13/25 = -0.00200000000000 x - 29/56 = 0.00014285714286 x - 72/139 = 0.00001438848921 x - 259/500 = 0.00000000000000 0.519000000000000 Rounded. x - 519/1000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.48100000000000 x - 1/2 = 0.01900000000000 x - 13/25 = -0.00100000000000 x - 41/79 = 0.00001265822785 x - 478/921 = -0.00000108577633 x - 519/1000 = 0.00000000000000 0.518518000000000 Two repeats, truncated. x - 259259/500000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.48148200000000 x - 1/2 = 0.01851800000000 x - 13/25 = -0.00148200000000 x - 14/27 = -0.00000051851852 x - 32929/63506 = 0.00000006468680 x - 36471/70337 = 0.00000000804697 x - 36975/71309 = 0.00000000086946 x - 37031/71417 = 0.00000000008401 x - 185183/357139 = 0.00000000000560 x - 259259/500000 = 0.00000000000000 0.518519000000000 Two repeats, rounded. x - 518519/1000000 = 0.00000000000000 via multiplication by 100000000 x - 1/1 = -0.48148100000000 x - 1/2 = 0.01851900000000 x - 13/25 = -0.00148100000000 x - 14/27 = 0.00000048148148 x - 35461/68389 = -0.00000006008276 x - 39283/75760 = -0.00000000739176 x - 39815/76786 = -0.00000000085953 x - 39885/76921 = -0.00000000001300 x - 478634/923079 = 0.00000000000108 x - 518519/1000000 = 0.00000000000000
FreeBASIC
<lang FreeBasic> Written in FreeBASIC (no error checking, limited to 64-bit signed math) type number as longint
- define str2num vallng
- define pow10(n) clngint(10 ^ (n))
function gcd(a as number, b as number) as number
if a = 0 then return b return gcd(b mod a, a)
end function
function parserational(n as const string) as string
dim as string whole, dec, num, denom dim as number iwhole, idec, inum, idenom, igcd find positions of '.', '(' and ')' in code dim as integer dpos, r1pos, r2pos dpos = instr(n & ".", ".") r1pos = instr(n & "(", "(") r2pos = instr(n & ")", ")") extract sections of number (whole, decimal, repeated numerator), generate '999' denominator whole = left(n, dpos - 1) dec = mid(n, dpos + 1, r1pos - dpos - 1) num = mid(n, r1pos + 1, r2pos - r1pos - 1) denom = string(len(num), "9"): if denom = "" then denom = "1" parse sections to integer iwhole = str2num(whole) idec = str2num(dec) inum = str2num(num) idenom = str2num(denom) if whole was negative, decimal and repeated sections need to be negative too if left(ltrim(whole), 1) = "-" then idec = -idec: inum = -inum add decimal part to repeated fraction, and scale down inum += idec * idenom idenom *= pow10(len(dec)) add integer part to fraction inum += iwhole * idenom simplify fraction igcd = abs(gcd(inum, idenom)) if igcd <> 0 then inum \= igcd idenom \= igcd end if return inum & " / " & idenom & " = " & (inum / idenom)
end function
data "0.9(054)", "0.(518)", "-.12(345)", "" do
dim as string n read n if n = "" then exit do print n & ":", parserational(n)
loop</lang>
Fōrmulæ
Fōrmulæ programs are not textual, visualization/edition of programs is done showing/manipulating structures but not text. Moreover, there can be multiple visual representations of the same program. Even though it is possible to have textual representation —i.e. XML, JSON— they are intended for storage and transfer purposes more than visualization and edition.
Programs in Fōrmulæ are created/edited online in its website, However they run on execution servers. By default remote servers are used, but they are limited in memory and processing power, since they are intended for demonstration and casual use. A local server can be downloaded and installed, it has no limitations (it runs in your own computer). Because of that, example programs can be fully visualized and edited, but some of them will not run if they require a moderate or heavy computation/memory resources, and no local server is being used.
In this page you can see the program(s) related to this task and their results.
Go
Go has no native decimal representation so strings are used as input here. The program parses it into a Go rational number, which automatically reduces. <lang go>package main
import (
"fmt" "math/big"
)
func main() {
for _, d := range []string{"0.9054054", "0.518518", "0.75"} { if r, ok := new(big.Rat).SetString(d); ok { fmt.Println(d, "=", r) } else { fmt.Println(d, "invalid decimal number") } }
}</lang> Output:
0.9054054 = 4527027/5000000 0.518518 = 259259/500000 0.75 = 3/4
Groovy
Solution:
Uses the Rational number class and RationalCategory helper class created in the solution to the Arithmetic/Rational task.
Test: <lang groovy>Number.metaClass.mixin RationalCategory
[
0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75, Math.E, -0.423310825, Math.PI, 0.111111111111111111111111
].each{
printf "%30.27f %s\n", it, it as Rational
}</lang>
Output:
0.905405400000000000000000000 4527027//5000000 0.518518000000000000000000000 259259//500000 0.750000000000000000000000000 3//4 2.718281828459045000000000000 6121026514868073//2251799813685248 -0.423310825000000000000000000 -16932433//40000000 3.141592653589793000000000000 884279719003555//281474976710656 0.111111111111111111111111000 111111111111111111111111//1000000000000000000000000
Clearly this solution does not make any assumptions or approximations regarding repeating decimals.
Haskell
Note that the decimal values of the task description are truncated in some cases.
The first map finds the simplest fractions within a given radius, because the floating-point representation is not exact. The second line shows that the numbers could be parsed into fractions at compile time if they are given the right type. The last converts the string representation of the given values directly to fractions. <lang haskell>Prelude> map (\d -> Ratio.approxRational d 0.0001) [0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75] [67 % 74,14 % 27,3 % 4] Prelude> [0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75] :: [Rational] [4527027 % 5000000,259259 % 500000,3 % 4] Prelude> map (fst . head . Numeric.readFloat) ["0.9054054", "0.518518", "0.75"] :: [Rational] [4527027 % 5000000,259259 % 500000,3 % 4]</lang>
J
J's x:
built-in will find a rational number which "best matches" a floating point number.
<lang j> x: 0.9054054 0.518518 0.75 NB. find "exact" rational representation 127424481939351r140737488355328 866492568306r1671094481399 3r4</lang>
These numbers are ratios where the integer on the left of the r
is the numerator and the integer on the right of the r
is the denominator. (Note that this use is in analogy with floating point notion, though it is true that hexadecimal notation and some languages' typed numeric notations use letters within numbers. Using letters rather than other characters makes lexical analysis simpler to remember - both letters and numbers are almost always "word forming characters".)
Note that the concept of "best" has to do with the expected precision of the argument: <lang j> x: 0.9 0.5 9r10 1r2
x: 0.9054 0.5185
4527r5000 1037r2000
x: 0.9054054 0.5185185
127424481939351r140737488355328 1037037r2000000
x: 0.9054054054 0.5185185185
5358191125333r5918002138463 6073341499873r11712872893031
x: 0.9054054054054 0.5185185185185
67r74 14r27
x: 0.9054054054054054 0.5185185185185185
67r74 14r27</lang>
Note that J allows us to specify an epsilon, for the purpose of recognizing a best fit, but the allowed values must be rather small. In J version 6, the value 5e_11 was nearly the largest epsilon allowed:
<lang j> x:(!. 5e_11) 0.9054054054 0.5185185185 67r74 14r27</lang>
(Note that epsilon will be scaled by magnitude of the largest number involved in a comparison when testing floating point representations of numbers for "equality". Note also that this J implementation uses 64 bit ieee floating point numbers.)
Here are some other alternatives for dealing with decimals and fractions:
<lang j> 0j10": x:inv x: 0.9054054 0.518518 0.75 NB. invertible (shown to 10 decimal places) 0.9054054000 0.5185180000 0.7500000000
0j10": x:inv 67r74 42r81 3r4 NB. decimal representation (shown to 10 decimal places)
0.9054054054 0.5185185185 0.7500000000
x: x:inv 67r74 42r81 3r4 NB. invertible
67r74 14r27 3r4</lang>
Java
<lang java>import org.apache.commons.math3.fraction.BigFraction;
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) { double[] n = {0.750000000, 0.518518000, 0.905405400, 0.142857143, 3.141592654, 2.718281828, -0.423310825, 31.415926536};
for (double d : n) System.out.printf("%-12s : %s%n", d, new BigFraction(d, 0.00000002D, 10000)); }
}</lang>
0.75 : 3 / 4 0.518518 : 37031 / 71417 0.9054054 : 67 / 74 0.142857143 : 1 / 7 3.141592654 : 104348 / 33215 2.718281828 : 23225 / 8544 -0.423310825 : -1253 / 2960 31.415926536 : 208696 / 6643
JavaScript
Deriving an approximation within a specified tolerance: <lang JavaScript>(() => {
'use strict';
const main = () => showJSON( map( // Using a tolerance epsilon of 1/10000 n => showRatio(approxRatio(0.0001)(n)), [0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75] ) );
// Epsilon -> Real -> Ratio
// approxRatio :: Real -> Real -> Ratio const approxRatio = eps => n => { const gcde = (e, x, y) => { const _gcd = (a, b) => (b < e ? a : _gcd(b, a % b)); return _gcd(Math.abs(x), Math.abs(y)); }, c = gcde(Boolean(eps) ? eps : (1 / 10000), 1, n); return Ratio( Math.floor(n / c), // numerator Math.floor(1 / c) // denominator ); };
// GENERIC FUNCTIONS ----------------------------------
// Ratio :: Int -> Int -> Ratio const Ratio = (n, d) => ({ type: 'Ratio', 'n': n, // numerator 'd': d // denominator });
// map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b] const map = (f, xs) => xs.map(f);
// showJSON :: a -> String const showJSON = x => JSON.stringify(x, null, 2);
// showRatio :: Ratio -> String const showRatio = nd => nd.n.toString() + '/' + nd.d.toString();
// MAIN --- return main();
})();</lang>
- Output:
[ "67/74", "14/27", "3/4" ]
jq
Works with jq (*)
Works with gojq, the Go implementation of jq
The following definition of `number_to_r` can be used for JSON numbers in general, as illustrated by the examples.
This entry assumes the availability of two functions (`r/2` and `power/1`) as defined in the "rational" module at Arithmetic/Rational#jq, which also provides a definition for `rpp/0`, a pretty-printer used in the examples.
(*) With the caveat that the C implementation of jq does not support unlimited-precision integer arithmetic.
<lang jq># include "rational"; # a reminder that r/2 and power/1 are required
- Input: any JSON number, not only a decimal
- Output: a rational, constructed using r/2
- Requires power/1 (to take advantage of gojq's support for integer arithmetic)
- and r/2 (for rational number constructor)
def number_to_r:
# input: a decimal string # $in - either null or the original input # $e - the integer exponent of the original number, or 0 def dtor($in; $e): index(".") as $ix | if $in and ($ix == null) then $in else (if $ix then sub("[.]"; "") else . end | tonumber) as $n | (if $ix then ((length - ($ix+1)) - $e) else - $e end) as $p | if $p >= 0 then r( $n; 10|power($p)) else r( $n * (10|power(-$p)); 1) end end; . as $in | tostring | if (test("[Ee]")|not) then dtor($in; 0) else capture("^(?[^eE]*)[Ee](?<e>.*$)") | (.e | if length > 0 then tonumber else 0 end) as $e | .s | dtor(null; $e) end ;</lang>
Examples <lang jq>0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75, 1e308 | "\(.) → \(number_to_r | rpp)"</lang>
- Output:
0.9054054 → 4527027 // 5000000 0.518518 → 259259 // 500000 0.75 → 3 // 4 1e+308 → 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 // 1
Julia
Julia has a native Rational type, and provides a convenience conversion function that implements a standard algorithm for approximating a floating-point number by a ratio of integers to within a given tolerance, which defaults to machine epsilon.
<lang Julia>rationalize(0.9054054) rationalize(0.518518) rationalize(0.75)</lang>
4527027//5000000 259259//500000 3//4
Since Julia by default uses its Float64 type to represent floating-point numbers, if enough decimal digits are provided (so that the difference between the floating-point representation of the resulting fraction and the original number is smaller than the machine epsilon) the smaller fraction is returned, which in this case is the exact result:
julia> rationalize(0.5185185185185185) 14//27 julia> rationalize(0.9054054054054054) 67//74
Here is the core algorithm written in Julia 1.0, without handling various data types and corner cases:
<lang Julia>function rat(x::AbstractFloat, tol::Real=eps(x))::Rational
p, q, pp, qq = copysign(1,x), 0, 0, 1 x, y = abs(x), 1.0 r, a = modf(x) nt, t, tt = tol, 0.0, tol while r > nt # convergents of the continued fraction: np//nq = (p*a + pp) // (q*a + qq) np, nq = Int(a).*(p,q) .+ (pp,qq) p, pp, q, qq = np, p, nq, q
x, y = y, r # instead of the inexact 1/r... a, r = divrem(x,y)
t, tt = nt, t # maintain x = (p + (-1)^i * r) / q nt = a*t+tt end
i = Int(cld(x-tt,y+t)) # find optimal semiconvergent: smallest i such that x-i*y < i*t+tt return (i*p+pp) // (i*q+qq)
end</lang>
Kotlin
<lang scala>// version 1.1.2
class Rational(val num: Long, val den: Long) {
override fun toString() = "$num/$den"
}
fun decimalToRational(d: Double): Rational {
val ds = d.toString().trimEnd('0').trimEnd('.') val index = ds.indexOf('.') if (index == -1) return Rational(ds.toLong(), 1L) var num = ds.replace(".", "").toLong() var den = 1L for (n in 1..(ds.length - index - 1)) den *= 10L while (num % 2L == 0L && den % 2L == 0L) { num /= 2L den /= 2L } while (num % 5L == 0L && den % 5L == 0L) { num /= 5L den /= 5L } return Rational(num, den)
}
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val decimals = doubleArrayOf(0.9054054, 0.518518, 2.405308, .75, 0.0, -0.64, 123.0, -14.6) for (decimal in decimals) println("${decimal.toString().padEnd(9)} = ${decimalToRational(decimal)}")
}</lang>
- Output:
0.9054054 = 4527027/5000000 0.518518 = 259259/500000 2.405308 = 601327/250000 0.75 = 3/4 0.0 = 0/1 -0.64 = -16/25 123.0 = 123/1 -14.6 = -73/5
Liberty BASIC
<lang lb> ' Uses convention that one repeating sequence implies infinitely repeating sequence.. ' Non-recurring fractions are limited to nd number of digits in nuerator & denominator
nd =3 ' suggest 3. 4 is slow. >4 is ....... do
read x$ data "0.5", "0.1", "0.333", "1 /3", "0.33", "0.14159265", "2^-0.5", "0.1 +0.9*rnd(1)" data "0.142857142857", "int( 1000*rnd(1))/int( 1000*rnd(1))","end" ' always between 0 and 0.999999... if x$ ="end" then exit do print x$; " is "; type$ =check$( x$) print type$;
if type$ ="recurring" then x =val( mid$( x$, 3, ( len( x$) -2) /2)) rep =( len( x$) -2) /2 num =x den =10^rep -1 gcd =gcd( num, den) print print " Calculating exact fraction for ", recurring$( x); " recurring & found"; print num /gcd; " /"; den /gcd print else ' non-recurring. Check numerators & denominators <1000 x =eval( x$) print print " Looking for fractions that are close to "; using( "#.############", x); " & found "; eps =10^nd for n = 1 to nd for i =1 to 10^n -1 for j =i to 10^n -1 fr =i /j if abs( x -fr) <eps then eps =abs( x -fr) 'print i; " /"; j; " = ", using( "##.############", fr), "with error +/-"; using( "###.#########", eps /x *100); " %" ii =i: jj =j if eps =0 then exit for end if next j scan if eps =0 then exit for next i if eps =0 then exit for next n print ii; " /"; jj print end if
loop until 0
print print "END."
end
function recurring$( x)
recurring$ ="0." do recurring$ =recurring$ +str$( x) loop until len( recurring$) >=14
end function
function gcd( a, b) ' thanks Uncle Ben..
while b <>0 t =b b =a mod b a =t wend gcd =a
end function
function check$( i$)
check$ ="non-recurring" length =len( i$) -2 ' allow for the '0.'. if length /2 =int( length /2) then if mid$( i$, 3, length /2) =mid$( i$, 3 +length /2, length /2) then check$ ="recurring"
end function </lang>
0.5 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.500000000000 & found 1 /2 0.1 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.100000000000 & found 1 /10 0.333 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.333000000000 & found 332 /997 1 /3 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.333333333333 & found 1 /3 0.33 is recurring Calculating exact fraction for 0.333333333333 recurring & found1 /3 0.14159265 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.141592650000 & found 16 /113 2^-0.5 is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.707106781187 & found 408 /577 0.1 +0.9*rnd(1) is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.489587274383 & found 47 /96 0.142857142857 is recurring Calculating exact fraction for 0.142857142857 recurring & found1 /7 int( 1000*rnd(1))/int( 1000*rnd(1)) is non-recurring Looking for fractions that are close to 0.032786885246 & found 2 /61 END.
Lua
Brute force, and why not? <lang lua>for _,v in ipairs({ 0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75, math.pi }) do
local n, d, dmax, eps = 1, 1, 1e7, 1e-15 while math.abs(n/d-v)>eps and d<dmax do d=d+1 n=math.floor(v*d) end print(string.format("%15.13f --> %d / %d", v, n, d))
end</lang>
- Output:
0.9054054000000 --> 4527027 / 5000000 0.5185180000000 --> 259259 / 500000 0.7500000000000 --> 3 / 4 3.1415926535898 --> 31415926 / 10000000
Maple
<lang Maple> > map( convert, [ 0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75 ], 'rational', 'exact' );
4527027 259259 [-------, ------, 3/4] 5000000 500000
</lang>
Mathematica / Wolfram Language
<lang Mathematica>Map[Rationalize[#,0]&,{0.9054054,0.518518, 0.75} ] -> {4527027/5000000,259259/500000,3/4}</lang>
MATLAB / Octave
<lang Matlab>
[a,b]=rat(.75) [a,b]=rat(.518518) [a,b]=rat(.9054054)
</lang>
Output:
>> [a,b]=rat(.75) a = 3 b = 4 >> [a,b]=rat(.518518) a = 37031 b = 71417 >> [a,b]=rat(.9054054) a = 67 b = 74
МК-61/52
<lang>П0 П1 ИП1 {x} x#0 14 КИП4 ИП1 1 0
- П1 БП 02 ИП4 10^x П0 ПA ИП1 ПB
ИПA ИПB / П9 КИП9 ИПA ИПB ПA ИП9 * - ПB x=0 20 ИПA ИП0 ИПA / П0 ИП1 ИПA / П1 ИП0 ИП1 С/П</lang>
NetRexx
Now the nearly equivalent program. <lang netrexx> /*NetRexx program to convert decimal numbers to fractions *************
- 16.08.2012 Walter Pachl derived from Rexx Version 2
- /
options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols
Numeric Digits 10 /* use "only" 10 digs of precision */ ratt('0.9054054054','67/74') ratt('0.5185185185','14/27') ratt('0.75' ,'3/4') ratt('0.905405400',' 693627417/766095958') ratt('0.9054054054','67/74') ratt('0.1428571428','1/7') ratt('35.000','35') ratt('35.001','35001/1000') ratt('0.00000000001','?') ratt('0.000001000001','1/999999')
ratt(0.9054054054,'1/3')
method ratt(d = Rexx,fs = Rexx) public static
fract=rat(d) Say ' 'd '->' fract Parse fract no '/' de If de= Then x=no Else x=no/de If x<>d Then Say '> '||x 'is different'
method rat(in, high=) public static /**********************************************************************
- rat(number<,high) returns a fraction or an integer that is equal to
- or approximately equal to number.
- Nominator and denominator must not have more than high digits
- 16.08.2012 Walter Pachl derived from Rexx Version 2
- /
if high== then high=10**(digits - 1) /* maximum nominator/denominator */ x=in /* working copy */ nom=0 /* start values nominator */ den=1 /* denominator */ tnom=1 /* temp nominator */ tden=0 /* temp denominator */ loop While tnom<=high & tden<=high /* nominator... not too large */ n=x.trunc() /* take integer part of x */ z=tnom; /* save temp nominator */ tnom=n*tnom+nom; /* compute new temp nominator */ nom=z /* assign nominator */ z=tden; /* save temp denominator */ tden=n*tden+den /* compute new temp denominato*/ den=z /* assign denominator */ if n=x | tnom/tden=in then do if tnom>high | tden>high then /* temp value(s) too large */ Leave /* don't use them */ nom=tnom /* otherwise take them as */ den=tden /* final values */ leave /* and end the loop */ end x=1/(x-n) /* compute x for next round */ end If den=1 Then Return nom /* an integer */ Else Return nom'/'den /* otherwise a fraction */</lang>
Output is the same as for Rexx Version 2.
Nim
Similar to the Rust and Julia implementations. <lang nim>import math import fenv
type
Rational = object numerator: int denominator: int
proc `$`(self: Rational): string =
if self.denominator == 1: $self.numerator else: $self.numerator & "//" & $self.denominator
func rationalize(x: float, tol: float = epsilon(float)): Rational =
var xx = x let flagNeg = xx < 0.0 if flagNeg: xx = -xx if xx < minimumPositiveValue(float): return Rational(numerator: 0, denominator: 1) if abs(xx - round(xx)) < tol: return Rational(numerator: int(round(xx)), denominator: 1) var a = 0 var b = 1 var c = int(ceil(xx)) var d = 1 var aux1 = high(int) div 2 while c < aux1 and d < aux1: var aux2 = (float(a) + float(c)) / (float(b) + float(d)) if abs(xx - aux2) < tol: break if xx > aux2: inc a, c inc b, d else: inc c, a inc d, b var gcd = gcd(a + c, b + d) if flagNeg: Rational(numerator: -(a + c) div gcd, denominator: (b + d) div gcd) else: Rational(numerator: (a + c) div gcd, denominator: (b + d) div gcd)
echo rationalize(0.9054054054) echo rationalize(0.9054054054, 0.0001) echo rationalize(0.5185185185) echo rationalize(0.5185185185, 0.0001) echo rationalize(0.75) echo rationalize(0.1428571428, 0.001) echo rationalize(35.000) echo rationalize(35.001) echo rationalize(0.9) echo rationalize(0.99) echo rationalize(0.909) echo rationalize(0.909, 0.001)</lang>
- Output:
2263456195//2499936693 67//74 1037026019//1999978751 14//27 3//4 1//7 35 35001//1000 9//10 99//100 909//1000 10//11
Nim also has a rationals library for this, though it does not allow you to set tolerances like the code above.
<lang nim>import rationals
echo toRational(0.9054054054) echo toRational(0.5185185185) echo toRational(0.75) echo toRational(0.1428571428) echo toRational(35.000) echo toRational(35.001) echo toRational(0.9) echo toRational(0.99) echo toRational(0.909)</lang>
- Output:
67/74 1037036407/1999998785 3/4 1/7 35/1 35001/1000 9/10 99/100 909/1000
PARI/GP
Quick and dirty. <lang parigp>convert(x)={
my(n=0); while(x-floor(x*10^n)/10^n!=0.,n++); floor(x*10^n)/10^n
};</lang>
To convert a number into a rational with a denominator not dividing a power of 10, use contfrac
and the Gauss-Kuzmin distribution to distinguish (hopefully!) where to truncate.
Perl
Note: the following is considerably more complicated than what was specified, because the specification is not, well, specific. Three methods are provided with different interpretation of what "conversion" means: keeping the string representation the same, keeping machine representation the same, or find best approximation with denominator in a reasonable range. None of them takes integer overflow seriously (though the best_approx is not as badly subject to it), so not ready for real use. <lang perl>sub gcd {
my ($m, $n) = @_; ($m, $n) = ($n, $m % $n) while $n; return $m
}
sub rat_machine {
my $n = shift; my $denom = 1; while ($n != int $n) { # assuming the machine format is base 2, and multiplying # by 2 doesn't change the mantissa $n *= 2;
# multiply denom by 2, ignoring (very) possible overflow $denom <<= 1; } if ($n) { my $g = gcd($n, $denom); $n /= $g; $denom /= $g; } return $n, $denom;
}
- helper, make continued fraction back into normal fraction
sub get_denom {
my ($num, $denom) = (1, pop @_); for (reverse @_) { ($num, $denom) = ($denom, $_ * $denom + $num); } wantarray ? ($num, $denom) : $denom
}
sub best_approx {
my ($n, $limit) = @_; my ($denom, $neg); if ($n < 0) { $neg = 1; $n = -$n; }
my $int = int($n); my ($num, $denom, @coef) = (1, $n - $int);
# continued fraction, sort of while (1) { # make sure it terminates last if $limit * $denom < 1; my $i = int($num / $denom);
# not the right way to get limit, but it works push @coef, $i;
if (get_denom(@coef) > $limit) { pop @coef; last; }
# we lose precision here, but c'est la vie ($num, $denom) = ($denom, $num - $i * $denom); }
($num, $denom) = get_denom @coef; $num += $denom * $int;
return $neg ? -$num : $num, $denom;
}
sub rat_string {
my $n = shift; my $denom = 1; my $neg;
# trival xyz.0000 ... case $n =~ s/\.0+$//; return $n, 1 unless $n =~ /\./;
if ($n =~ /^-/) { $neg = 1; $n =~ s/^-//; }
# shift decimal point to the right till it's gone $denom *= 10 while $n =~ s/\.(\d)/$1\./; $n =~ s/\.$//;
# removing leading zeros lest it looks like octal $n =~ s/^0*//; if ($n) { my $g = gcd($n, $denom); $n /= $g; $denom /= $g; } return $neg ? -$n : $n, $denom;
}
my $limit = 1e8; my $x = 3/8; print "3/8 = $x:\n"; printf "machine: %d/%d\n", rat_machine $x; printf "string: %d/%d\n", rat_string $x; printf "approx below $limit: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, $limit;
$x = 137/4291; print "\n137/4291 = $x:\n"; printf "machine: %d/%d\n", rat_machine $x; printf "string: %d/%d\n", rat_string $x; printf "approx below $limit: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, $limit;
$x = sqrt(1/2); print "\n1/sqrt(2) = $x\n"; printf "machine: %d/%d\n", rat_machine $x; printf "string: %d/%d\n", rat_string $x; printf "approx below 10: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, 10; printf "approx below 100: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, 100; printf "approx below 1000: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, 1000; printf "approx below 10000: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, 10000; printf "approx below 100000: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, 100000; printf "approx below $limit: %d/%d\n", best_approx $x, $limit;
$x = -4 * atan2(1,1); print "\n-Pi = $x\n"; printf "machine: %d/%d\n", rat_machine $x; printf "string: %d/%d\n", rat_string $x;
for (map { 10 ** $_ } 1 .. 10) {
printf "approx below %g: %d / %d\n", $_, best_approx($x, $_)
}</lang>
Output:
3/8 = 0.375: machine: 3/8 string: 3/8 approx below 100000000: 3/8 137/4291 = 0.0319272896760662: machine: 2300603678209305/72057594037927936 string: 159636448380331/5000000000000000 approx below 100000000: 137/4291 1/sqrt(2) = 0.707106781186548 machine: 6369051672525773/9007199254740992 string: 176776695296637/250000000000000 approx below 10: 5/7 approx below 100: 29/41 approx below 1000: 408/577 approx below 10000: 5741/8119 approx below 100000: 33461/47321 approx below 100000000: 38613965/54608393 -Pi = -3.14159265358979 machine: -884279719003555/281474976710656 string: -314159265358979/100000000000000 approx below 10: -22 / 7 approx below 100: -22 / 7 approx below 1000: -355 / 113 approx below 10000: -355 / 113 approx below 100000: -208341 / 66317 approx below 1e+06: -1146408 / 364913 approx below 1e+07: -5419351 / 1725033 approx below 1e+08: -245850922 / 78256779 approx below 1e+09: -1881244168 / 598818617 approx below 1e+10: -9978066541 / 3176117225
Phix
<lang Phix>function decrat(string s) integer nom = 0 integer denom = 1
if s[1..2]!="0." then ?9/0 end if for i=3 to length(s) do integer ch = s[i] if ch<'0' or ch>'9' then ?9/0 end if nom = nom*10 + ch-'0' denom *= 10 end for return sq_div({nom,denom},gcd(nom,denom))
end function
?decrat("0.9054054") ?decrat("0.518518") ?decrat("0.75")</lang>
- Output:
{4527027,5000000} {259259,500000} {3,4}
PHP
<lang php>function asRational($val, $tolerance = 1.e-6) {
if ($val == (int) $val) { // integer return $val; }
$h1=1; $h2=0; $k1=0; $k2=1; $b = 1 / $val;
do { $b = 1 / $b; $a = floor($b); $aux = $h1; $h1 = $a * $h1 + $h2; $h2 = $aux; $aux = $k1; $k1 = $a * $k1 + $k2; $k2 = $aux; $b = $b - $a; } while (abs($val-$h1/$k1) > $val * $tolerance);
return $h1.'/'.$k1;
}
echo asRational(1/5)."\n"; // "1/5" echo asRational(1/4)."\n"; // "1/4" echo asRational(1/3)."\n"; // "1/3" echo asRational(5)."\n"; // "5"</lang>
PL/I
<lang>(size, fofl): Convert_Decimal_To_Rational: procedure options (main); /* 14 January 2014, from Ada */
Real_To_Rational: procedure (R, Bound, Numerator, Denominator) recursive
options (reorder); declare R float (18), Bound float, (Numerator, Denominator) fixed binary (31); declare Error float; declare Best fixed binary initial (1); declare Best_Error float initial (huge(error)); declare I fixed binary (31);
if R = 0 then do; Numerator = 0; Denominator = 1; return; end; else if R < 0 then do; call Real_To_Rational(-R, Bound, Numerator, Denominator); Numerator = -Numerator; return; end; else do I = 1 to Bound; Error = abs(I * R - trunc(I * R + sign(R)*0.5)); if Error < Best_Error then do; Best = I; Best_Error = Error; end; end;
Denominator = Best; Numerator = Denominator * R + sign(R) * 0.5;
end Real_To_Rational;
declare (Num, Denom) fixed binary (31); declare R float (18); declare I fixed BINARY;
do R = 0.75, 0.25, 0.3333333, 0.518518000, 0.905405400, 0.142857143, 3.141592654, 2.718281828, -0.423310825, 31.415926536, 0; put skip edit(R) (f(13,9)); do I = 0 to 4; call Real_to_Rational(R, 10**I, Num, Denom); put edit(' ' || trim(Num) || ' / ' || trim(Denom)) (a); end; end;
end Convert_Decimal_To_Rational;</lang> Output:
0.750000000 1 / 1 3 / 4 3 / 4 3 / 4 3 / 4 0.250000000 0 / 1 1 / 4 1 / 4 1 / 4 1 / 4 0.333333300 0 / 1 1 / 3 1 / 3 1 / 3 1 / 3 0.518518000 1 / 1 1 / 2 14 / 27 14 / 27 14 / 27 0.905405400 1 / 1 9 / 10 67 / 74 67 / 74 67 / 74 0.142857143 0 / 1 1 / 7 1 / 7 1 / 7 1 / 7 3.141592654 3 / 1 22 / 7 22 / 7 355 / 113 355 / 113 2.718281828 3 / 1 19 / 7 193 / 71 1457 / 536 25946 / 9545 -0.423310825 0 / 1 -3 / 7 -11 / 26 -69 / 163 -1253 / 2960 31.415926536 31 / 1 157 / 5 377 / 12 3550 / 113 208696 / 6643 0.000000000 0 / 1 0 / 1 0 / 1 0 / 1 0 / 1
PureBasic
<lang purebasic>Procedure.i ggT(a.i, b.i)
Define t.i : If a < b : Swap a, b : EndIf While a%b : t=a : a=b : b=t%a : Wend : ProcedureReturn b
EndProcedure
Procedure.s Dec2Rat(dn.d)
Define nk$, gt.i, res$ nk$=Trim(StringField(StrD(dn),2,"."),"0") gt=ggT(Val(nk$),Int(Pow(10.0,Len(nk$)))) res$=Str(Val(nk$)/gt)+"/"+Str(Int(Pow(10.0,Len(nk$)))/gt) ProcedureReturn res$
EndProcedure
OpenConsole() Define d.d Repeat
Read.d d : If Not (d>0.0 And d<1.0) : Break : EndIf Print(LSet(StrD(d),15," ")+" -> "+#TAB$+Dec2Rat(d)+#CRLF$)
ForEver Input() : End
DataSection
Data.d 0.9054054,0.518518,0.75,0.0
EndDataSection</lang>
0.9054054 -> 4527027/5000000 0.518518 -> 259259/500000 0.75 -> 3/4
Python
Note that the decimal values of the task description are truncated in some cases.
The first loop limits the size of the denominator, because the floating-point representation is not exact. The second converts the string representation of the given values directly to fractions. <lang python>>>> from fractions import Fraction >>> for d in (0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75): print(d, Fraction.from_float(d).limit_denominator(100))
0.9054054 67/74 0.518518 14/27 0.75 3/4 >>> for d in '0.9054054 0.518518 0.75'.split(): print(d, Fraction(d))
0.9054054 4527027/5000000 0.518518 259259/500000 0.75 3/4 >>> </lang>
Or, writing our own approxRatio function:
<lang python>Approximate rationals from decimals
from math import (floor, gcd) import sys
- approxRatio :: Float -> Float -> Ratio
def approxRatio(epsilon):
The simplest rational approximation to n within the margin given by epsilon. def gcde(e, x, y): def _gcd(a, b): return a if b < e else _gcd(b, a % b) return _gcd(abs(x), abs(y)) return lambda n: (lambda c=( gcde(epsilon if 0 < epsilon else (0.0001), 1, n) ): ratio(floor(n / c))(floor(1 / c)))()
- main :: IO ()
def main():
Conversions at different levels of precision.
xs = [0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75] print( fTable(__doc__ + ' (epsilon of 1/10000):\n')(str)( lambda r: showRatio(r) + ' -> ' + repr(fromRatio(r)) )( approxRatio(1 / 10000) )(xs) ) print('\n')
e = minBound(float) print( fTable(__doc__ + ' (epsilon of ' + repr(e) + '):\n')(str)( lambda r: showRatio(r) + ' -> ' + repr(fromRatio(r)) )( approxRatio(e) )(xs) )
- GENERIC -------------------------------------------------
- fromRatio :: Ratio Int -> Float
def fromRatio(r):
A floating point value derived from a a rational value. return r.get('numerator') / r.get('denominator')
- minBound :: Bounded Type -> a
def minBound(t):
Minimum value for a bounded type. maxsize = sys.maxsize float_infomin = sys.float_info.min return { int: (-maxsize - 1), float: float_infomin, bool: False, str: chr(0) }[t]
- ratio :: Int -> Int -> Ratio Int
def ratio(n):
Rational value constructed from a numerator and a denominator. def go(n, d): g = gcd(n, d) return { 'type': 'Ratio', 'numerator': n // g, 'denominator': d // g } return lambda d: go(n * signum(d), abs(d))
- showRatio :: Ratio -> String
def showRatio(r):
String representation of the ratio r. d = r.get('denominator') return str(r.get('numerator')) + ( ' / ' + str(d) if 1 != d else )
- signum :: Num -> Num
def signum(n):
The sign of n. return -1 if 0 > n else (1 if 0 < n else 0)
- DISPLAY -------------------------------------------------
- fTable :: String -> (a -> String) ->
- (b -> String) -> (a -> b) -> [a] -> String
def fTable(s):
Heading -> x display function -> fx display function -> f -> xs -> tabular string. def go(xShow, fxShow, f, xs): ys = [xShow(x) for x in xs] w = max(map(len, ys)) return s + '\n' + '\n'.join(map( lambda x, y: y.rjust(w, ' ') + ' -> ' + fxShow(f(x)), xs, ys )) return lambda xShow: lambda fxShow: lambda f: lambda xs: go( xShow, fxShow, f, xs )
- MAIN ---
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()</lang>
- Output:
Approximate rationals from decimals (epsilon of 1/10000): 0.9054054 -> 67 / 74 -> 0.9054054054054054 0.518518 -> 14 / 27 -> 0.5185185185185185 0.75 -> 3 / 4 -> 0.75 Approximate rationals from decimals (epsilon of 2.2250738585072014e-308): 0.9054054 -> 4077583422059235 / 4503599627370496 -> 0.9054054 0.518518 -> 2335197471584895 / 4503599627370496 -> 0.518518 0.75 -> 3 / 4 -> 0.75
R
<lang R> ratio<-function(decimal){
denominator=1 while(nchar(decimal*denominator)!=nchar(round(decimal*denominator))){ denominator=denominator+1 } str=paste(decimal*denominator,"/",sep="") str=paste(str,denominator,sep="") return(str)
} </lang>
- Output:
> ratio(.75) [1] "3/4" > ratio(0.9054054) [1] "4527027/5e+06" > ratio(3.14) [1] "157/50"
Quackery
Using the Quackery big number rational arithmetic library bigrat.qky
.
<lang Quackery>[ $ "bigrat.qky" loadfile ] now!
[ dup echo$ say " is " $->v drop dup 100 > if [ say "approximately " proper 100 round improper ] vulgar$ echo$ say "." cr ] is task ( $ --> )
$ "0.9054054 0.518518 0.75" nest$ witheach task</lang>
- Output:
0.9054054 is approximately 67/74. 0.518518 is approximately 14/27. 0.75 is 3/4.
Racket
Racket has builtin exact and inexact representantions of numbers, 3/4 is a valid number syntactically, and one can change between the exact and inexact values with the functions showed in the example. They have some amount of inaccuracy, but i guess it can be tolerated. <lang Racket>#lang racket
(inexact->exact 0.75) ; -> 3/4 (exact->inexact 3/4) ; -> 0.75
(exact->inexact 67/74) ; -> 0.9054054054054054 (inexact->exact 0.9054054054054054) ;-> 8155166892806033/9007199254740992</lang>
Raku
(formerly Perl 6) Decimals are natively represented as rationals in Raku, so if the task does not need to handle repeating decimals, it is trivially handled by the .nude method, which returns the numerator and denominator: <lang perl6>say .nude.join('/') for 0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75;</lang>
- Output:
4527027/5000000 259259/500000 3/4
However, if we want to take repeating decimals into account, then we can get a bit fancier. <lang perl6>sub decimal_to_fraction ( Str $n, Int $rep_digits = 0 ) returns Str {
my ( $int, $dec ) = ( $n ~~ /^ (\d+) \. (\d+) $/ )».Str or die;
my ( $numer, $denom ) = ( $dec, 10 ** $dec.chars ); if $rep_digits { my $to_move = $dec.chars - $rep_digits; $numer -= $dec.substr(0, $to_move); $denom -= 10 ** $to_move; }
my $rat = Rat.new( $numer.Int, $denom.Int ).nude.join('/'); return $int > 0 ?? "$int $rat" !! $rat;
}
my @a = ['0.9054', 3], ['0.518', 3], ['0.75', 0], | (^4).map({['12.34567', $_]}); for @a -> [ $n, $d ] {
say "$n with $d repeating digits = ", decimal_to_fraction( $n, $d );
}</lang>
- Output:
0.9054 with 3 repeating digits = 67/74 0.518 with 3 repeating digits = 14/27 0.75 with 0 repeating digits = 3/4 12.34567 with 0 repeating digits = 12 34567/100000 12.34567 with 1 repeating digits = 12 31111/90000 12.34567 with 2 repeating digits = 12 17111/49500 12.34567 with 3 repeating digits = 12 1279/3700
REXX
version 1
This REXX example supports almost any form of numeric input, some examples are:
- ±nnn
- ±nnn.
- ±nnn.fff
- ±.fff
- ±nnnE±ppp
- .fffE±ppp
- ±nnn.fffE±ppp (with an uppercase exponent signifier)
- ±nnn.fffe±ppp (with an lowercase exponent signifier)
- numeratorNumber/denominatorNumber
- denominator is optional (but if a / is used, it must be present)
- superfluous blanks are permitted (for whitespace)
- leading zeroes are permitted
- leading signs are permitted
- improper fractions are permitted
─── where:
- nnn represent decimal digits before the decimal point (if there is one)
- fff represent decimal digits after the decimal point (if there is one)
- ppp represent decimal digits of the (base ten) exponent
- ± represent an optional (leading) sign, either + or -
- . if it's trailing, the decimal point is optional
REXX can support almost any number of decimal digits, but 10 was chosen for practicality for this task.
<lang rexx>/*REXX program converts a rational fraction [n/m] (or nnn.ddd) to it's lowest terms.*/
numeric digits 10 /*use ten decimal digits of precision. */
parse arg orig 1 n.1 "/" n.2; if n.2= then n.2=1 /*get the fraction.*/
if n.1= then call er 'no argument specified.'
do j=1 for 2; if \datatype(n.j, 'N') then call er "argument isn't numeric:" n.j end /*j*/ /* [↑] validate arguments: n.1 n.2 */
if n.2=0 then call er "divisor can't be zero." /*Whoa! We're dividing by zero ! */ say 'old =' space(orig) /*display the original fraction. */ say 'new =' rat(n.1/n.2) /*display the result ──► terminal. */ exit /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */ /*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/ er: say; say '***error***'; say; say arg(1); say; exit 13 /*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/ rat: procedure; parse arg x 1 _x,y; if y== then y = 10**(digits()-1)
b=0; g=0; a=1; h=1 /* [↑] Y is the tolerance.*/ do while a<=y & g<=y; n=trunc(_x) _=a; a=n*a+b; b=_ _=g; g=n*g+h; h=_ if n=_x | a/g=x then do; if a>y | g>y then iterate b=a; h=g; leave end _x=1/(_x-n) end /*while*/ if h==1 then return b /*don't return number ÷ by 1.*/ return b'/'h /*proper or improper fraction. */</lang>
output when using various inputs (which are displayed as part of the output):
(Multiple runs are shown, outputs are separated by a blank line.)
old = 0.9054054054 new = 67/74 old = 0.5185185185 new = 14/27 old = 0.75 new = 3/4 old = 0.905405400 new = 693627417/766095958 old = 0.9054054054 new = 67/74 old = 0.1428571428 new = 1/7
version 2
<lang rexx>/*REXX program to convert decimal numbers to fractions ****************
- 15.08.2012 Walter Pachl derived from above for readability
- It took me time to understand :-) I need descriptive variable names
- Output shows where the fraction only approximates the number
- due to the limit (high) imposed on nominator and denominator
- /
Numeric Digits 10 /* use "only" 10 digs of precision */ Call test '0.9054054054','67/74' Call test '0.5185185185','14/27' Call test '0.75' ,'3/4' Call test '0.905405400',' 693627417/766095958' Call test '0.9054054054','67/74' Call test '0.1428571428','1/7' Call test '35.000','35' Call test '35.001','35001/1000' Call test '0.00000000001','?' Call test '0.000001000001','1/999999' Exit
test: /**********************************************************************
- Test driver for rat
- /
Parse Arg d,fs /* number and expected fraction */ fh=rat(d) /* convert number to fracrion */ Call o ' 'd fh If fh<>fs Then Call o ' not='fs interpret 'x='fh /* compute value of fraction */ If x<>d Then /* not exactly equal to number */ Call o '> '||x 'is different' Call o ' ' Return
o: Say arg(1); Return
rat: procedure /**********************************************************************
- rat(number<,high) returns a fraction or an integer that is equal to
- or approximately equal to number.
- Nominator and denominator must not have more than high digits
- 15.08.2012 Walter Pachl derived from Version 1
- /
parse arg in,high
x=in /* working copy */ if high== then high=10**(digits()-1) /* maximum nominator/denominator */ nom=0 /* start values nominator */ den=1 /* denominator */ tnom=1 /* temp nominator */ tden=0 /* temp denominator */ do While tnom<=high & tden<=high /* nominator... not too large */ n=trunc(x) /* take integer part of x */ z=tnom; /* save temp nominator */ tnom=n*tnom+nom; /* compute new temp nominator */ nom=z /* assign nominator */ z=tden; /* save temp denominator */ tden=n*tden+den /* compute new temp denominato*/ den=z /* assign denominator */ if n=x | tnom/tden=in then do if tnom>high | tden>high then /* temp value(s) too large */ Leave /* don't use them */ nom=tnom /* otherwise take them as */ den=tden /* final values */ leave /* and end the loop */ end x=1/(x-n) /* compute x for next round */ end if den=1 then return nom /* denominator 1: integer */ return nom'/'den /* otherwise a fraction */
</lang> Output:
0.9054054054 67/74 0.5185185185 14/27 0.75 3/4 0.905405400 693627417/766095958 > 0.9054053996 is different 0.9054054054 67/74 0.1428571428 1/7 > 0.1428571429 is different 35.000 35 35.001 35001/1000 0.00000000001 0 not=? > 0 is different 0.000001000001 1/999999
version 3
<lang rexx>/* REXX ---------------------------------------------------------------
- 13.02.2014 Walter Pachl
- specify the number as xxx.yyy(pqr) pqr is the period
- for the number xxx.yyypqrpqrpqrpqrpqr...
- --------------------------------------------------------------------*/
Numeric Digits 100 Call test '5.55555','111111/20000' Call test '3','3' Call test '0.03','3/100' Call test '0.9(054)','67/74' Call test '0.(3)','1/3' Call test '5.28(571428)','37/7' Call test '5.28(571428)','38/7 (demonstrate error case)' Call test '0.(518)','14/27' Call test '0.75' ,'3/4' Call test '0.(142857)','1/7' Call test '0.1(428571)','1/7' Call test '35.000','35' Call test '35.001','35001/1000' Call test '0.00000000001','1/100000000000' Call test '0.000001000001','1000001/1000000000000' Exit test:
Parse Arg z, soll zin=z If pos('(',z)=0 Then Do Parse Var z i '.' f z=i||f n=10**length(f) End Else Do lp=pos('(',z)-3 rp=pos(')',z)-4 x=space(translate(z,' ','()'),0) z1=x*10**lp Parse Var z1 z1 '.' z2=x*10**rp z=z2-z1 n=10**rp-10**lp End dd=gcd(z,n) zz=z/dd nn=n/dd If nn=1 Then fract=zz Else fract=zz'/'nn If fract==soll Then tag='ok' Else tag='should be' soll say zin '=' fract tag Return
GCD: procedure /**********************************************************************
- Recursive procedure
- /
Parse Arg a,b if b = 0 then return abs(a) return GCD(b,a//b)</lang> Output:
5.55555 = 111111/20000 ok 3 = 3 ok 0.03 = 3/100 ok 0.9(054) = 67/74 ok 0.(3) = 1/3 ok 5.28(571428) = 37/7 ok 5.28(571428) = 37/7 should be 38/7 (demonstrate error case) 0.(518) = 14/27 ok 0.75 = 3/4 ok 0.(142857) = 1/7 ok 0.1(428571) = 1/7 ok 35.000 = 35 ok 35.001 = 35001/1000 ok 0.00000000001 = 1/100000000000 ok 0.000001000001 = 1000001/1000000000000 ok
Ruby
Note that the decimal values of the task description are truncated in some cases.
This converts the string representation of the given values directly to fractions. <lang ruby>> '0.9054054 0.518518 0.75'.split.each { |d| puts "%s %s" % [d, Rational(d)] } 0.9054054 4527027/5000000 0.518518 259259/500000 0.75 3/4 => ["0.9054054", "0.518518", "0.75"]</lang>
This loop finds the simplest fractions within a given radius, because the floating-point representation is not exact. <lang ruby>[0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75].each { |f| puts "#{f} #{f.rationalize(0.0001)}" }
- =>0.9054054 67/74
- =>0.518518 14/27
- =>0.75 3/4
</lang>
A suffix for integer and float literals was introduced:
2.1.0p0 :001 > 0.9054054r => (4527027/5000000) 2.1.0p0 :002 > 0.518518r => (259259/500000) 2.1.0p0 :003 > 0.75r => (3/4)
Rust
<lang> extern crate rand; extern crate num;
use num::Integer; use rand::Rng;
fn decimal_to_rational (mut n : f64) -> [isize;2] {
//Based on Farey sequences assert!(n.is_finite()); let flag_neg = n < 0.0; if flag_neg { n = n*(-1.0) } if n < std::f64::MIN_POSITIVE { return [0,1] } if (n - n.round()).abs() < std::f64::EPSILON { return [n.round() as isize, 1] } let mut a : isize = 0; let mut b : isize = 1; let mut c : isize = n.ceil() as isize; let mut d : isize = 1; let aux1 = isize::max_value()/2; while c < aux1 && d < aux1 { let aux2 : f64 = (a as f64 + c as f64)/(b as f64 + d as f64); if (n - aux2).abs() < std::f64::EPSILON { break } if n > aux2 { a = a + c; b = b + d; } else { c = a + c; d = b + d; } } // Make sure that the fraction is irreducible let gcd = (a+c).gcd(&(b+d)); if flag_neg { [-(a + c)/gcd, (b + d)/gcd] } else { [(a + c)/gcd, (b + d)/gcd] }
}
- [test]
fn test1 () {
// Test the function with 1_000_000 random decimal numbers let mut rng = rand::thread_rng(); for _i in 1..1_000_000 { let number = rng.gen::<f64>(); let result = decimal_to_rational(number); assert!((number - (result[0] as f64)/(result[1] as f64)).abs() < std::f64::EPSILON); assert!(result[0].gcd(&result[1]) == 1); }
}
fn main () {
let mut rng = rand::thread_rng(); for _i in 1..10 { let number = rng.gen::<f64>(); let result = decimal_to_rational(number); if result[1] == 1 { println!("{} -> {}", number, result[0]) } else { println!("{} -> {}/{}", number, result[0], result[1]) } } for i in [-0.9054054, 0.518518, -0.75, 0.5185185185185185, -0.9054054054054054, 0.0, 1.0, 2.0].iter() { let result = decimal_to_rational(*i as f64); if result[1] == 1 { println!("{} = {}",*i, result[0]) } else { println!("{} = {}/{}", *i, result[0], result[1]) } }
} </lang> First test the function with 1_000_000 random double floats :
running 1 test test test1 ... ok test result: ok. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out
Now run it with 10 random double floats and some selected ones printing the results
0.47783621261626297 -> 36036136/75415247 0.29135687639237284 -> 164756020/565478399 0.04962905490905656 -> 4105111/82715881 0.33418703921783965 -> 16612678/49710719 0.07284921759788943 -> 6252865/85832974 0.783712619202954 -> 62096920/79234299 0.3788902482801324 -> 30401287/80237713 0.03780115715370047 -> 1522201/40268635 0.9975233883406127 -> 79858287/80056556 -0.9054054 -> -4527027/5000000 0.518518 -> 259259/500000 -0.75 -> -3/4 0.5185185185185185 -> 14/27 -0.9054054054054054 -> -67/74 0 -> 0 1 -> 1 2 -> 2
Scala
- Output:
Best seen running in your browser Scastie (remote JVM).
<lang Scala>import org.apache.commons.math3.fraction.BigFraction
object Number2Fraction extends App {
val n = Array(0.750000000, 0.518518000, 0.905405400, 0.142857143, 3.141592654, 2.718281828, -0.423310825, 31.415926536) for (d <- n) println(f"$d%-12s : ${new BigFraction(d, 0.00000002D, 10000)}%s")
}</lang>
Seed7
The library bigrat.s7i defines the operator parse, which accepts, besides fractions, also a decimal number with repeating decimals. <lang seed7>$ include "seed7_05.s7i";
include "bigrat.s7i";
const proc: main is func
begin writeln(bigRational parse "0.9(054)"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.(518)"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.75"); writeln(bigRational parse "3.(142857)"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.(8867924528301)"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.(846153)"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.9054054"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.518518"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.14285714285714"); writeln(bigRational parse "3.14159265358979"); writeln(bigRational parse "2.718281828"); writeln(bigRational parse "31.415926536"); writeln(bigRational parse "0.000000000"); end func;</lang>
- Output:
67/74 14/27 3/4 22/7 47/53 11/13 4527027/5000000 259259/500000 7142857142857/50000000000000 314159265358979/100000000000000 679570457/250000000 3926990817/125000000 0/1
Sidef
By default, literal numbers are represented in rational form: <lang ruby>say 0.75.as_frac #=> 3/4 say 0.518518.as_frac #=> 259259/500000 say 0.9054054.as_frac #=> 4527027/5000000</lang>
Additionally, Num(str) can be used for parsing a decimal expansion into rational form: <lang ruby>'0.9054054 0.518518 0.75'.split.each { |str|
say Num(str).as_frac
}</lang>
- Output:
4527027/5000000 259259/500000 3/4
For rational approximations, the Number .rat_approx method can be used: <lang ruby>say 0.518518.rat_approx.as_frac #=> 14/27 say 0.9054054.rat_approx.as_frac #=> 67/74</lang>
Tcl
Here is a complete script with the implemented function and a small test suite (which is executed when this script is called directly from a shell) - originally on http://wiki.tcl.tk/752: <lang Tcl>#!/usr/bin/env tclsh
proc dbl2frac {dbl {eps 0.000001}} { for {set den 1} {$den<1024} {incr den} { set num [expr {round($dbl*$den)}] if {abs(double($num)/$den - $dbl) < $eps} break } list $num $den }
- -------------------- That's all... the rest is the test suite
if {[file tail $argv0] eq [file tail [info script]]} {
foreach {test -> expected} {
{dbl2frac 0.518518} -> {42 81} {dbl2frac 0.75} -> {3 4} {dbl2frac 0.9054054} -> {67 74}
} {
catch $test res if {$res ne $expected} { puts "$test -> $res, expected $expected" }
}
}</lang> Running it shows one unexpected result, but on closer examination it is clear that 14/27 equals 42/81, so it should indeed be the right solution:
~ $ fractional.tcl dbl2frac 0.518518 -> 14 27, expected 42 81 ~ $
Vala
<lang vala>struct Fraction {
public long d; public long n;
}
Fraction rat_approx(double f, long md) {
long a; long[] h = {0, 1, 0}; long[] k = {1, 0, 0}; long x, d, n = 1; bool neg = false; if (md <= 1) return {1, (long)f}; if (f < 0) { neg = true; f = -f; } while (f != Math.floor(f)) { n <<= 1; f *= 2; } d = (long)f; for (int i = 0; i < 64; i++) { a = (n != 0) ? d / n : 0; if (i != 0 && a == 0) break; x = d; d = n; n = x %n; x = a; if (k[1] * a + k[0] >= md) { x = (md - k[0]) / k[1]; if (x * 2 >= a || k[1] >= md) i = 65; else break; } h[2] = x * h[1] + h[0]; h[0] = h[1]; h[1] = h[2]; k[2] = x * k[1] + k[0]; k[0] = k[1]; k[1] = k[2]; } return {k[1], neg ? -h[1] : h[1]};
}
void main() {
double f;
print("f = %16.14f\n", f = 1.0/7); for (int i = 1; i < 20000000; i *= 16) { print("denom <= %11d: ", i); var r = rat_approx(f, i); print("%11ld/%ld\n", r.n, r.d); }
print("f = %16.14f\n", f = Math.atan2(1,1) * 4); for (int i = 1; i < 20000000; i *= 16) { print("denom <= %11d: ", i); var r = rat_approx(f, i); print("%11ld/%ld\n", r.n, r.d); }
}</lang>
- Output:
f = 0.14285714285714 denom <= 1: 0/1 denom <= 16: 1/7 denom <= 256: 1/7 denom <= 4096: 1/7 denom <= 65536: 1/7 denom <= 1048576: 1/7 denom <= 16777216: 1/7 f = 3.14159265358979 denom <= 1: 3/1 denom <= 16: 22/7 denom <= 256: 355/113 denom <= 4096: 355/113 denom <= 65536: 104348/33215 denom <= 1048576: 3126535/995207 denom <= 16777216: 47627751/15160384
VBA
<lang vb>Function Real2Rational(r As Double, bound As Long) As String
If r = 0 Then
Real2Rational = "0/1"
ElseIf r < 0 Then
Result = Real2Rational(-r, bound) Real2Rational = "-" & Result
Else
best = 1 bestError = 1E+99 For i = 1 To bound + 1 currentError = Abs(i * r - Round(i * r)) If currentError < bestError Then best = i bestError = currentError If bestError < 1 / bound Then GoTo SkipLoop End If Next i
SkipLoop:
Real2Rational = Round(best * r) & "/" & best
End If End Function
Sub TestReal2Rational() Debug.Print "0.75" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(0.75, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "0.518518" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(0.518518, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "0.9054054" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(0.9054054, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "0.142857143" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(0.142857143, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "3.141592654" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(3.141592654, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "2.718281828" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(2.718281828, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "-0.423310825" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(-0.423310825, CLng(Order));
Next i Debug.Print
Debug.Print "31.415926536" & ":"; For i = 0 To 5
Order = CDbl(10) ^ CDbl(i) Debug.Print " " & Real2Rational(31.415926536, CLng(Order));
Next i End Sub </lang>
- Output:
0.75: 1/1 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 0.518518: 1/1 1/2 14/27 14/27 14/27 37031/71417 0.9054054: 1/1 1/1 67/74 67/74 67/74 67/74 0.142857143: 0/1 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 3.141592654: 3/1 22/7 22/7 355/113 355/113 104348/33215 2.718281828: 3/1 19/7 193/71 1457/536 23225/8544 173459/63812 -0.423310825: -0/1 -3/7 -11/26 -69/163 -1253/2960 -10093/23843 31.415926536: 31/1 157/5 377/12 3550/113 208696/6643 1563445/49766
Wren
<lang ecmascript>import "/rat" for Rat import "/fmt" for Fmt
var tests = [0.9054054, 0.518518, 0.75] for (test in tests) {
var r = Rat.fromFloat(test) System.print("%(Fmt.s(-9, test)) -> %(r)")
}</lang>
- Output:
0.9054054 -> 4527027/5000000 0.518518 -> 259259/500000 0.75 -> 3/4
zkl
<lang zkl>fcn real2Rational(r,bound){
if (r == 0.0) return(0,1); if (r < 0.0){ result := real2Rational(-r, bound); return(-result[0],result[1]); } else { best,bestError := 1,(1.0).MAX; foreach i in ([1 .. bound + 1]){ error := (r*i - (r*i).round()).abs();
if (error < bestError) best,bestError = i,error;
} return((r*best).round().toInt(),best); }
}</lang> <lang zkl>tests := T(0.750000000, 0.518518000, 0.905405400, 0.142857143, 3.141592654, 2.718281828, -0.423310825, 31.415926536); foreach r in (tests) {
print("%8.9f ".fmt(r)); foreach i in (6) { print(" %d/%d".fmt(real2Rational(r,(10).pow(i)).xplode())) } println();
}</lang>
- Output:
0.750000000 1/1 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 3/4 0.518518000 1/2 1/2 14/27 14/27 14/27 37031/71417 0.905405400 1/1 10/11 67/74 67/74 67/74 67/74 0.142857143 0/1 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 1/7 3.141592654 3/1 22/7 22/7 355/113 355/113 104348/33215 2.718281828 3/1 19/7 193/71 2721/1001 25946/9545 222630/81901 -0.423310825 -1/2 -3/7 -11/26 -69/163 -1253/2960 -10093/23843 31.415926536 63/2 157/5 3173/101 3550/113 208696/6643 2918194/92889
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