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More mathematical functions can be found in the 数学扩展 section
[#1] Nitrogen [2010-09-06 20:02:06]
I made a function that can be used for converting numbers to any base you wish.. instead of returning a string of pre-defined index of characters (i.e. 0-9a-z) you could simply make your own of any length using the array of indexes it returns.
I looked around and didn't see anybody made one, I needed one for a simple compression algorithm with only numbers, I've not actually made it yet but this was an initial idea.
<?php
// ConvertBase function explained:
// we add an array item $Input%$Base floored and divide $Input by $Base floored.
// repeat until $Input is no longer above 0.
function ConvertBase($Input,$Base=10) {
$Input=gmp_init($Input);
$Result=array();
for($i=0;$i<1||gmp_sign($Input)==1;$i++) {
$Result[]=gmp_intval(gmp_mod($Input,$Base));
$Input=gmp_div_q($Input,$Base);
}
$Result=array_reverse($Result);
return($Result);
}
// an example how gmp_strval($.., 36); could be achieved:
// the funny emergency number from The IT Crowd
// (leading zeroes aren't liked in gmp_init though)
$Input = '1189998819991197253';
// our example 36 characters used in gmp_strval($.., 36);
$Chars = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz';
// count the $Chars so they're all used
// or use your own number less than the length of $Chars
$Base = strlen($Chars);
// perform
$Result = ConvertBase($Input,$Base);
// replace the resulting index with the corrosponding characters of the index in $Chars
for($i=0;$i<count($Result);$i++)
$Result[$i]=$Chars{$Result[$i]};
// compare
printf("gmp_strval: %s\r\n",gmp_strval($Input,36));
printf("BaseConvert: %s\r\n",implode($Result));
?>
The example shows a familiar result of course, but the idea of this function was so that you can use whatever base you wish, and display entirely your own output to represent any number of choice.
Also, for those who wish to do bitwise shifting, it's quite simple.. to shift left, just multiply the number by pow(2,x), and to shift right, divide by pow(2,x).
<?php
function gmp_shiftl($x,$n) { // shift left
return(gmp_mul($x,gmp_pow(2,$n)));
}
function gmp_shiftr($x,$n) { // shift right
return(gmp_div($x,gmp_pow(2,$n)));
}
?>
Have fun,
Nitrogen.
[#2] john at worldmapad dot com [2006-07-22 23:24:28]
Here's a quick and dirty way to use simple GMP functions with PHP without recompiling. It is dependent upon the use of the exec() function, so make sure you can use exec(). While in safe mode you must consider the safe_mode_exec_dir directive. And don't simply pass user input to the exec function without validating the input first!
Download and Install GMP as instructed in README and INSTALL files.
On my MAC OS X Server, I just did the following:
./configure
make
make check
make install
This installed it in the /usr/local directory. There were some errors, but not with any functions I needed.
Within the gmp-4.#.# cd into the demos directory. Then compile pexpr.c by typing:
make pexpr
This is a simple expressions parser which serves as a simple interface to some of the basic GMP functions.
You can test it then like:
./pexpr "102394874783 * 23498748";
Now you may interface with it using PHP's exec() function.
[#3] richard-slater.co.uk [2004-02-22 01:03:59]
For those (like me) who are trying to do bit masking with very large numbers, here is a useful function to do the work for you.
<?php
function isBitSet($bitMask, $bitMap)
{
return (bool) gmp_intval(gmp_div(gmp_and($bitMask, $bitMap),$bitMask));
}
?>