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			273 lines
		
	
	
		
			9.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								[section:next_float Floating-Point Representation Distance (ULP),
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								   and Finding Adjacent Floating-Point Values]
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								[@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_in_the_last_place Unit of Least Precision or Unit in the Last Place]
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								is the gap between two different, but as close as possible, floating-point numbers.
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								Most decimal values, for example 0.1, cannot be exactly represented as floating-point values,
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								but will be stored as the
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								[@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point#Representable_numbers.2C_conversion_and_rounding
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								closest representable floating-point].
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								Functions are provided for finding adjacent greater and lesser floating-point values,
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								and estimating the number of gaps between any two floating-point values.
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								The floating-point type (FPT) must have has a fixed number of bits in the representation.
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								The number of bits may set at runtime, but must be the same for all numbers.
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								For example, __NTL_quad_float type (fixed 128-bit representation),
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								__NTL_RR type (arbitrary but fixed decimal digits, default 150) or
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								__multiprecision __cpp_dec_float and__cpp_bin_float  are fixed at runtime,
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								but [*not] a type that extends the representation to provide an exact representation
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								for any number, for example [@http://keithbriggs.info/xrc.html XRC eXact Real in C].
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								[section:nextafter Finding the Next Representable Value in a Specific Direction (nextafter)]
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/next.hpp>
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								``
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								  namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								  template <class FPT>
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								  FPT nextafter(FPT val, FPT direction);
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								  }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - nextafter]
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								This is an implementation of the `nextafter` function included in the C99 standard.
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								(It is also effectively an implementation of the C99 `nexttoward` legacy function
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								which differs only having a `long double` direction,
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								and can generally serve in its place if required).
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								[note The C99 functions must use suffixes f and l to distinguish `float` and `long double` versions.
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								C++ uses the template mechanism instead.]
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								Returns the next representable value after /x/ in the direction of /y/.  If
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								`x == y` then returns /x/.  If /x/ is non-finite then returns the result of
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								a __domain_error.  If there is no such value in the direction of /y/ then
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								returns an __overflow_error.
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								[warning The template parameter FTP must be a floating-point type.
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								An integer type, for example, will produce an unhelpful error message.]
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								[tip Nearly always, you just want the next or prior representable value,
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								so instead use `float_next` or `float_prior` below.]
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								[h4 Examples - nextafter]
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								The two representations using a 32-bit float either side of unity are:
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								``
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								The nearest (exact) representation of 1.F is      1.00000000
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								nextafter(1.F, 999) is                            1.00000012
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								nextafter(1/f, -999) is                           0.99999994
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								The nearest (not exact) representation of 0.1F is 0.100000001
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								nextafter(0.1F, 10) is                            0.100000009
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								nextafter(0.1F, 10) is                            0.099999994
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								``
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								[endsect] [/section:nextafter Finding the Next Representable Value in a Specific Direction (nextafter)]
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								[section:float_next Finding the Next Greater Representable Value (float_next)]
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/next.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class FPT>
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								   FPT float_next(FPT val);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - float_next]
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								Returns the next representable value which is greater than /x/.
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								If /x/ is non-finite then returns the result of
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								a __domain_error.  If there is no such value greater than /x/ then
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								returns an __overflow_error.
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								Has the same effect as
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								  nextafter(val, (std::numeric_limits<FPT>::max)());
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								[endsect] [/section:float_next Finding the Next Greater Representable Value (float_prior)]
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								[section:float_prior Finding the Next Smaller Representable Value (float_prior)]
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/next.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class FPT>
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								   FPT float_prior(FPT val);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - float_prior]
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								Returns the next representable value which is less than /x/.
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								If /x/ is non-finite then returns the result of
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								a __domain_error.  If there is no such value less than /x/ then
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								returns an __overflow_error.
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								Has the same effect as
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								  nextafter(val, -(std::numeric_limits<FPT>::max)());  // Note most negative value -max.
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								[endsect] [/section:float_prior Finding the Next Smaller Representable Value (float_prior)]
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								[section:float_distance Calculating the Representation Distance
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								   Between Two floating-point Values (ULP) float_distance]
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								Function float_distance finds the number of gaps/bits/ULP between any two floating-point values.
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								If the significands of floating-point numbers are viewed as integers,
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								then their difference is the number of ULP/gaps/bits different.
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/next.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class FPT>
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								   FPT float_distance(FPT a, FPT b);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - float_distance]
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								Returns the distance between /a/ and /b/: the result is always
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								a signed integer value (stored in floating-point type FPT)
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								representing the number of distinct representations between /a/ and /b/.
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								Note that
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								* `float_distance(a, a)` always returns 0.
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								* `float_distance(float_next(a), a)` always returns -1.
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								* `float_distance(float_prior(a), a)` always returns 1.
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								The function `float_distance` is equivalent to calculating the number
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								of ULP (Units in the Last Place) between /a/ and /b/ except that it
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								returns a signed value indicating whether `a > b` or not.
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								If the distance is too great then it may not be able
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								to be represented as an exact integer by type FPT,
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								but in practice this is unlikely to be a issue.
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								[endsect] [/section:float_distance Calculating the Representation Distance
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								   Between Two floating-point Values (ULP) float_distance]
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								[section:float_advance Advancing a floating-point Value by a Specific
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								Representation Distance (ULP) float_advance]
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								Function `float_advance` advances a floating-point number by a specified number
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								of ULP.
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/next.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class FPT>
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								   FPT float_advance(FPT val, int distance);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - float_advance]
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								Returns a floating-point number /r/ such that `float_distance(val, r) == distance`.
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								[endsect] [/section:float_advance]
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								[section:ulp Obtaining the Size of a Unit In the Last Place - ULP]
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								Function `ulp` gives the size of a unit-in-the-last-place for a specified floating-point value.
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/ulp.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class FPT>
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								   FPT ulp(const FPT& x);
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								   template <class FPT, class Policy>
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								   FPT ulp(const FPT& x, const Policy&);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								[h4 Description - ulp]
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								Returns one [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_in_the_last_place unit in the last place] of ['x].
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								Corner cases are handled as followes:
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								* If the argument is a NaN, then raises a __domain_error.
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								* If the argument is an infinity, then raises an __overflow_error.
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								* If the argument is zero then returns the smallest representable value: for example for type
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								`double` this would be either `std::numeric_limits<double>::min()` or `std::numeric_limits<double>::denorm_min()`
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								depending whether denormals are supported (which have the values 2.`2250738585072014e-308` and `4.9406564584124654e-324` respectively).
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								* If the result is too small to represent, then returns the smallest representable value.
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								* Always returns a positive value such that `ulp(x) == ulp(-x)`.
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								[*Important:]  The behavior of this function is aligned to that of [@http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/Math.html#ulp%28double%29
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								Java's ulp function], please note
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								however that this function should only ever be used for rough and ready calculations as there are enough
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								corner cases to trap even careful programmers.  In particular:
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								* The function is asymetrical, which is to say, given `u = ulp(x)` if `x > 0` then `x + u` is the
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								next floating-point value, but `x - u` is not necessarily the previous value.  Similarly, if
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								`x < 0` then `x - u` is the previous floating-point value, but `x + u` is not necessarily the next
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								value.  The corner cases occur at power of 2 boundaries.
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								* When the argument becomes very small, it may be that there is no floating-point value that
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								represents one ULP.  Whether this is the case or not depends not only on whether the hardware
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								may ['sometimes] support denormals (as signalled by `std::numeric_limits<FPT>::has_denorm`), but also whether these are
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								currently enabled at runtime (for example on SSE hardware, the DAZ or FTZ flags will disable denormal support).
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								In this situation, the `ulp` function may return a value that is many orders of magnitude too large.
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								In light of the issues above, we recomend that:
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								* To move between adjacent floating-point values always use __float_next, __float_prior or __nextafter (`std::nextafter`
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								is another candidate, but our experience is that this also often breaks depending which optimizations and
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								hardware flags are in effect).
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								* To move several floating-point values away use __float_advance.
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								* To calculate the edit distance between two floats use __float_distance.
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								There is none the less, one important use case for this function:
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								If it is known that the true result of some function is x[sub t] and the calculated result
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								is x[sub c], then the error measured in ulp is simply [^fabs(x[sub t] - x[sub c]) / ulp(x[sub t])].
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								[endsect] [/section ulp]
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								[endsect] [/ section:next_float Floating-Point Representation Distance (ULP),
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								   and Finding Adjacent Floating-Point Values]
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								[/
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								  Copyright 2008 John Maddock and Paul A. Bristow.
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								  Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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								  (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
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								  http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
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								]
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