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Bug #13152

closed

Numeric parsing differences between ruby <-> crystal

Added by jzakiya (Jabari Zakiya) almost 8 years ago. Updated over 4 years ago.

Status:
Rejected
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:79226]

Description

I noticed this difference between ruby and crystal when converting a gem.

puts   -2**4 -> -16 (ruby) || 16 (crystal)
puts (-2)**4 ->  16 (both)

ruby parses -2**4 as -(2**4), while crystal does (-2)**4, which is more intuitive.
This creates need to be careful converting negative number usage from ruby <-> crystal.
(I haven't investigated differences with other languages.)
Using parentheses to explicitly create intended outcomes can overcome this.

However, on the heels of the discussion/decision to not change the default rounding behavior of numerics
in 2.4.0 would it also be worth it to change this parsing behavior to make this more natural
and intuitive, as in crystal?


Related issues 2 (0 open2 closed)

Has duplicate Ruby master - Bug #16677: Negative integer powered (**) to a float number results in a complex Closedmatz (Yukihiro Matsumoto)Actions
Has duplicate Ruby master - Bug #18188: -1 ** 0 is 1 not -1RejectedActions

Updated by jzakiya (Jabari Zakiya) almost 8 years ago

I noticed this difference between ruby and crystal when converting a gem.

puts -2**4 -> -16 (ruby) || 16 (crystal)
puts (-2)**4 -> 16 (both)

ruby parses -2**4 as -(2**4), while crystal does (-2)**4, which is more intuitive.
This creates need to be careful converting negative number usage from ruby <-> crystal.
(I haven't investigated differences with other languages.)
Using parentheses to explicitly create intended outcomes can overcome this.

However, on the heels of the discussion/decision to not change the default rounding behavior of numerics
in 2.4.0 would it also be worth it to change this parsing behavior to make this more natural
and intuitive, as in crystal?

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) almost 8 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Feedback

A few questions:

  • What is the result if this expression is written as a formula (i.e. with the exponent as a superscript)? Wouldn't this be the more 'intuitive' behavior?

  • What would the backwards compatibility issues be for Ruby when changing this? (I guess there might be quite a few subtle bugs.)

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

  • Wouldn't it be quite easy to automate this part of the conversion?

  • Why do I think that the sentence "However, on the heels of the discussion/decision to not change the default rounding behavior of numerics in 2.4.0 would it also be worth it to change this parsing behavior to make this more natural
    and intuitive, as in crystal?" doesn't make sense? On the heels of not making a backwards incompatible change, would it really be worth to make another backwards incompatible change?

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) almost 8 years ago

  • Description updated (diff)
  • Status changed from Feedback to Rejected

It is intentional.
That unary minus is not considered a part of an integer literal.

Updated by shyouhei (Shyouhei Urabe) almost 8 years ago

Martin Dürst wrote:

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

Here we go:

zsh % /bin/sh
sh-3.2$ echo $((-2 ** 4))
16
sh-3.2$
zsh % perl -e 'warn(eval("-2 ** 4"));'
-16 at -e line 1.
zsh % php -a
Interactive shell

php > $a = -2 ** 4; echo $a;
-16
php >
zsh % python3
Python 3.6.0 (default, Dec 24 2016, 00:01:50)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 8.0.0 (clang-800.0.42.1)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> -2 ** 4
-16
>>>
zsh % /Users/urabe.shyouhei/Applications/Julia-0.5.app/Contents/Resources/julia/bin/julia
               _
   _       _ _(_)_     |  A fresh approach to technical computing
  (_)     | (_) (_)    |  Documentation: http://docs.julialang.org
   _ _   _| |_  __ _   |  Type "?help" for help.
  | | | | | | |/ _` |  |
  | | |_| | | | (_| |  |  Version 0.5.0 (2016-09-19 18:14 UTC)
 _/ |\__'_|_|_|\__'_|  |  Official http://julialang.org/ release
|__/                   |  x86_64-apple-darwin13.4.0

julia> -2 ** 4
ERROR: syntax: use "^" instead of "**"

julia> -2 ^ 4
-16

julia>
zsh % ghci
GHCi, version 8.0.2: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/  :? for help
Prelude> -2 ** 4
-16.0
Prelude>
zsh % ocaml
        OCaml version 4.04.0

# -2 ** 4 ;;
Error: This expression has type int but an expression was expected of type
         float
# -2. ** 4. ;;
- : float = 16.
#

I also checked other languages like C#, Swift, Go, Rust and turned out they don't have this kind of operator.

So from my experiment I cannot say if it's Ruby or Cristal who's wrong. I think it's a design choice.

Updated by yancya (Shinta Koyanagi) almost 8 years ago

Martin Dürst wrote:

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

I tried it by nodejs v7.4.0.

console.log(process.version);
//=> v7.4.0

console.log(-2 ** 4);
//console.log(-2 ** 4);
//               ^^
//SyntaxError: Unexpected token **

console.log((-2) ** 4); //=> 16
console.log(-(2 ** 4)); //=> -16

Updated by repeatedly (Masahiro Nakagawa) almost 8 years ago

Martin Dürst wrote:

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

Here is dlang result:

import std.stdio;

void main()
{
    writeln(-2 ^^ 4);    // -16
    writeln((-2) ^^ 4);  // 16
}

Updated by kaoru (Kaoru TAKAHASHI) almost 8 years ago

Martin Dürst wrote:

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

here is METAFONT result.

This is METAFONT, Version 2.7182818 (TeX Live 2016/Debian) (preloaded base=mf)
**\relax

*show -2**4;
>> 16
*show (-2)**4;
>> 16

Updated by ka (k a) almost 8 years ago

Martin Dürst wrote:

  • What do other languages (in particular languages more well known that Cristal) do?

Lua result:

$ lua
Lua 5.3.3  Copyright (C) 1994-2016 Lua.org, PUC-Rio
> -2 ^ 4
-16.0
> - 2 ^ 4
-16.0
> (-2) ^ 4
16.0

Updated by yasu (Yasuyuki Hirata) almost 8 years ago

FORTRAN

      PROGRAM POW
      WRITE (*,*) -2**4
      STOP
      END

=> -16

Updated by ytomino (yuta tomino) almost 8 years ago

Ada

with Ada.Integer_Text_IO;
procedure pow is
begin
Ada.Integer_Text_IO.Put (-2 ** 4);
end;
    -16

Updated by ytomino (yuta tomino) almost 8 years ago

By the way, about "/" and "%" operators, in Ruby:

irb(main):001:0> -10%3 # (-10) % 3 == 2
=> 2
irb(main):002:0> 0-10%3 # 0 - (10 % 3) == -1
=> -1

in Ada:

with Ada.Integer_Text_IO;
procedure modu is
begin
Ada.Integer_Text_IO.Put (-10 mod 3); -- -(10 % 3) == -1
Ada.Integer_Text_IO.Put (0 - 10 mod 3); -- 0 - (10 % 3) == -1
Ada.Integer_Text_IO.Put ((-10) mod 3); -- (-10) % 3 == 2
end;
     -1         -1          2

Which is more intuitive?

Updated by metanest (Makoto Kishimoto) almost 8 years ago

$ nawk --version
awk version 20121220 (FreeBSD)
$ nawk 'END { printf("%d\n", -2 ** 4) }' < /dev/null
-16

Updated by stomar (Marcus Stollsteimer) almost 8 years ago

The comparison with other programming languages is kind of interesting, but the main argument IMO for
the implemented behavior hasn't been mentioned:

We are talking about mathematical operations here, and in mathematics, the expression -a^b is equivalent to -(a^b), because the exponentiation has a higher precedence. So Ruby's behavior is more "natural and intuitive" IMO (while I would tend to consider Crystal's behavior wrong, or confusing at best).

Actions #15

Updated by shyouhei (Shyouhei Urabe) over 4 years ago

  • Has duplicate Bug #16677: Negative integer powered (**) to a float number results in a complex added

Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 4 years ago

wolframalpha.com

-2**4 =
-16
-2^4 =
-16
Actions #17

Updated by shyouhei (Shyouhei Urabe) about 3 years ago

  • Has duplicate Bug #18188: -1 ** 0 is 1 not -1 added
Actions

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