| # GMP perl module |
| |
| # Copyright 2001-2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| # |
| # This file is part of the GNU MP Library. |
| # |
| # The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| # it under the terms of either: |
| # |
| # * the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free |
| # Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your |
| # option) any later version. |
| # |
| # or |
| # |
| # * the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software |
| # Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any |
| # later version. |
| # |
| # or both in parallel, as here. |
| # |
| # The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but |
| # WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY |
| # or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License |
| # for more details. |
| # |
| # You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License and the |
| # GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU MP Library. If not, |
| # see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. |
| |
| # [Note: The above copyright notice is repeated in the documentation section |
| # below, in order to get it into man pages etc generated by the various pod |
| # conversions. When changing, be sure to update below too.] |
| |
| |
| # This code is designed to work with perl 5.005, so it and the sub-packages |
| # aren't as modern as they could be. |
| |
| package GMP; |
| |
| require Symbol; |
| require Exporter; |
| require DynaLoader; |
| @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader); |
| |
| @EXPORT = qw(); |
| @EXPORT_OK = qw(version); |
| %EXPORT_TAGS = ('all' => [qw( |
| get_d get_d_2exp get_si get_str integer_p |
| printf sgn sprintf)], |
| 'constants' => [()]); |
| Exporter::export_ok_tags('all'); |
| |
| $VERSION = '2.00'; |
| bootstrap GMP $VERSION; |
| |
| |
| # The format string is cut up into "%" specifiers so GMP types can be |
| # passed to GMP::sprintf_internal. Any "*"s are interpolated before |
| # calling sprintf_internal, which saves worrying about variable |
| # argument lists there. |
| # |
| # Because sprintf_internal is only called after the conversion and |
| # operand have been checked there won't be any crashes from a bad |
| # format string. |
| # |
| sub sprintf { |
| my $fmt = shift; |
| my $out = ''; |
| my ($pre, $dummy, $pat, $rest); |
| |
| while (($pre, $dummy, $pat, $rest) = ($fmt =~ /^((%%|[^%])*)(%[- +#.*hlLqv\d]*[bcdfeEgGinopsuxX])(.*)$/s)) { |
| |
| $out .= $pre; |
| |
| my $pat2 = $pat; # $pat with "*"s expanded |
| my @params = (); # arguments per "*"s |
| while ($pat2 =~ /[*]/) { |
| my $arg = shift; |
| $pat2 =~ s/[*]/$arg/; |
| push @params, $arg; |
| } |
| |
| if (UNIVERSAL::isa($_[0],"GMP::Mpz")) { |
| if ($pat2 !~ /[dioxX]$/) { |
| die "GMP::sprintf: unsupported output format for mpz: $pat2\n"; |
| } |
| $pat2 =~ s/(.)$/Z$1/; |
| $out .= sprintf_internal ($pat2, shift); |
| |
| } elsif (UNIVERSAL::isa($_[0],"GMP::Mpq")) { |
| if ($pat2 !~ /[dioxX]$/) { |
| die "GMP::sprintf: unsupported output format for mpq: $pat2\n"; |
| } |
| $pat2 =~ s/(.)$/Q$1/; |
| $out .= sprintf_internal ($pat2, shift); |
| |
| } elsif (UNIVERSAL::isa($_[0],"GMP::Mpf")) { |
| if ($pat2 !~ /[eEfgG]$/) { |
| die "GMP::sprintf: unsupported output format for mpf: $pat2\n"; |
| } |
| $pat2 =~ s/(.)$/F$1/; |
| $out .= sprintf_internal ($pat2, shift); |
| |
| } elsif ($pat =~ /n$/) { |
| # do it this way so h, l or V type modifiers are respected, and use a |
| # dummy variable to avoid a warning about discarding the value |
| my $dummy = sprintf "%s$pat", $out, $_[0]; |
| shift; |
| |
| } else { |
| $out .= sprintf $pat, @params, shift; |
| } |
| |
| $fmt = $rest; |
| } |
| $out .= $fmt; |
| return $out; |
| } |
| |
| sub printf { |
| if (ref($_[0]) eq 'GLOB') { |
| my $h = Symbol::qualify_to_ref(shift, caller); |
| print $h GMP::sprintf(@_); |
| } else { |
| print STDOUT GMP::sprintf(@_); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| 1; |
| __END__ |
| |
| |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| GMP - Perl interface to the GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| use GMP; |
| use GMP::Mpz; |
| use GMP::Mpq; |
| use GMP::Mpf; |
| use GMP::Rand; |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| This module provides access to GNU MP arbitrary precision integers, |
| rationals and floating point. |
| |
| No functions are exported from these packages by default, but can be |
| selected in the usual way, or the tag :all for everything. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(gcd, lcm); # just these functions |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(:all); # everything in mpq |
| |
| =head2 GMP::Mpz |
| |
| This class provides arbitrary precision integers. A new mpz can be |
| constructed with C<mpz>. The initial value can be an integer, float, |
| string, mpz, mpq or mpf. Floats, mpq and mpf will be automatically |
| truncated to an integer. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(:all); |
| my $a = mpz(123); |
| my $b = mpz("0xFFFF"); |
| my $c = mpz(1.5); # truncated |
| |
| The following overloaded operators are available, and corresponding |
| assignment forms like C<+=>, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| + - * / % E<lt>E<lt> E<gt>E<gt> ** & | ^ ! E<lt> E<lt>= == != E<gt> E<gt>= |
| E<lt>=E<gt> abs not sqrt |
| |
| =back |
| |
| C</> and C<%> round towards zero (as per the C<tdiv> functions in GMP). |
| |
| The following functions are available, behaving the same as the |
| corresponding GMP mpz functions, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| bin, cdiv, cdiv_2exp, clrbit, combit, congruent_p, congruent_2exp_p, |
| divexact, divisible_p, divisible_2exp_p, even_p, fac, fdiv, fdiv_2exp, fib, |
| fib2, gcd, gcdext, hamdist, invert, jacobi, kronecker, lcm, lucnum, lucnum2, |
| mod, mpz_export, mpz_import, nextprime, odd_p, perfect_power_p, |
| perfect_square_p, popcount, powm, probab_prime_p, realloc, remove, root, |
| roote, scan0, scan1, setbit, sizeinbase, sqrtrem, tdiv, tdiv_2exp, tstbit |
| |
| =back |
| |
| C<cdiv>, C<fdiv> and C<tdiv> and their C<2exp> variants return a |
| quotient/remainder pair. C<fib2> returns a pair F[n] and F[n-1], similarly |
| C<lucnum2>. C<gcd> and C<lcm> accept a variable number of arguments (one or |
| more). C<gcdext> returns a triplet of gcd and two cofactors, for example |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(:all); |
| $a = 7257; |
| $b = 10701; |
| ($g, $x, $y) = gcdext ($a, $b); |
| print "gcd($a,$b) is $g, and $g == $a*$x + $b*$y\n"; |
| |
| C<mpz_import> and C<mpz_export> are so named to avoid the C<import> keyword. |
| Their parameters are as follows, |
| |
| $z = mpz_import ($order, $size, $endian, $nails, $string); |
| $string = mpz_export ($order, $size, $endian, $nails, $z); |
| |
| The order, size, endian and nails parameters are as per the corresponding C |
| functions. The string input for C<mpz_import> is interpreted as byte data |
| and must be a multiple of $size bytes. C<mpz_export> conversely returns a |
| string of byte data, which will be a multiple of $size bytes. |
| |
| C<invert> returns the inverse, or undef if it doesn't exist. C<remove> |
| returns a remainder/multiplicity pair. C<root> returns the nth root, and |
| C<roote> returns a root/bool pair, the bool indicating whether the root is |
| exact. C<sqrtrem> and C<rootrem> return a root/remainder pair. |
| |
| C<clrbit>, C<combit> and C<setbit> expect a variable which they can modify, |
| it doesn't make sense to pass a literal constant. Only the given variable |
| is modified, if other variables are referencing the same mpz object then a |
| new copy is made of it. If the variable isn't an mpz it will be coerced to |
| one. For instance, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(setbit); |
| setbit (123, 0); # wrong, don't pass a constant |
| $a = mpz(6); |
| $b = $a; |
| setbit ($a, 0); # $a becomes 7, $b stays at 6 |
| |
| C<scan0> and C<scan1> return ~0 if no 0 or 1 bit respectively is found. |
| |
| =head2 GMP::Mpq |
| |
| This class provides rationals with arbitrary precision numerators and |
| denominators. A new mpq can be constructed with C<mpq>. The initial value |
| can be an integer, float, string, mpz, mpq or mpf, or a pair of integers or |
| mpz's. No precision is lost when converting a float or mpf, the exact value |
| is retained. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(:all); |
| $a = mpq(); # zero |
| $b = mpq(0.5); # gives 1/2 |
| $b = mpq(14); # integer 14 |
| $b = mpq(3,4); # fraction 3/4 |
| $b = mpq("7/12"); # fraction 7/12 |
| $b = mpq("0xFF/0x100"); # fraction 255/256 |
| |
| When a fraction is given, it should be in the canonical form specified in |
| the GMP manual, which is denominator positive, no common factors, and zero |
| always represented as 0/1. If not then C<canonicalize> can be called to put |
| it in that form. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(:all); |
| $q = mpq(21,15); # eek! common factor 3 |
| canonicalize($q); # get rid of it |
| |
| The following overloaded operators are available, and corresponding |
| assignment forms like C<+=>, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| + - * / E<lt>E<lt> E<gt>E<gt> ** ! E<lt> E<lt>= == != E<gt> E<gt>= |
| E<lt>=E<gt> abs not |
| |
| =back |
| |
| The following functions are available, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| den, inv, num |
| |
| =back |
| |
| C<inv> calculates 1/q, as per the corresponding GMP function. C<num> and |
| C<den> return an mpz copy of the numerator or denominator respectively. In |
| the future C<num> and C<den> might give lvalues so the original mpq can be |
| modified through them, but this is not done currently. |
| |
| =head2 GMP::Mpf |
| |
| This class provides arbitrary precision floating point numbers. The |
| mantissa is an arbitrary user-selected precision and the exponent is a fixed |
| size (one machine word). |
| |
| A new mpf can be constructed with C<mpf>. The initial value can be an |
| integer, float, string, mpz, mpq or mpf. The second argument specifies the |
| desired precision in bits, or if omitted then the default precision is used. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpf qw(:all); |
| $a = mpf(); # zero |
| $b = mpf(-7.5); # default precision |
| $c = mpf(1.5, 500); # 500 bits precision |
| $d = mpf("1.0000000000000001"); |
| |
| The following overloaded operators are available, with the corresponding |
| assignment forms like C<+=>, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| + - * / E<lt>E<lt> E<gt>E<gt> ** ! E<lt> E<lt>= == != E<gt> E<gt>= |
| E<lt>=E<gt> abs not sqrt |
| |
| =back |
| |
| The following functions are available, behaving the same as the |
| corresponding GMP mpf functions, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| ceil, floor, get_default_prec, get_prec, mpf_eq, set_default_prec, set_prec, |
| trunc |
| |
| =back |
| |
| C<mpf_eq> is so named to avoid clashing with the perl C<eq> operator. |
| |
| C<set_prec> expects a variable which it can modify, it doesn't make sense to |
| pass a literal constant. Only the given variable is modified, if other |
| variables are referencing the same mpf object then a new copy is made of it. |
| If the variable isn't an mpf it will be coerced to one. |
| |
| Results are the same precision as inputs, or if two mpf's are given to a |
| binary operator then the precision of the first is used. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpf qw(mpf); |
| $a = mpf(2.0, 100); |
| $b = mpf(2.0, 500); |
| $c = $a + $b; # gives 100 bits precision |
| |
| Mpf to string conversion via "" or the usual string contexts uses C<$#> the |
| same as normal float to string conversions, or defaults to C<%.g> if C<$#> |
| is not defined. C<%.g> means all significant digits in the selected |
| precision. |
| |
| =head2 GMP class |
| |
| The following functions are available in the GMP class, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| fits_slong_p, get_d, get_d_2exp, get_si, get_str, integer_p, printf, sgn, |
| sprintf, version |
| |
| =back |
| |
| C<get_d_2exp> accepts any integer, string, float, mpz, mpq or mpf operands |
| and returns a float and an integer exponent, |
| |
| ($dbl, $exp) = get_d_2exp (mpf ("3.0")); |
| # dbl is 0.75, exp is 2 |
| |
| C<get_str> takes an optional second argument which is the base, defaulting |
| to decimal. A negative base means upper case, as per the C functions. For |
| integer, integer string, mpz or mpq operands a string is returned. |
| |
| use GMP qw(:all); |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(:all); |
| print get_str(mpq(-5,8)),"\n"; # -5/8 |
| print get_str(255,16),"\n"; # ff |
| |
| For float, float strings or mpf operands, C<get_str> accepts an optional |
| third parameter being how many digits to produce, defaulting to 0 which |
| means all digits. (Only as many digits as can be accurately represented by |
| the float precision are ever produced though.) A string/exponent pair is |
| returned, as per the C mpf_get_str function. For example, |
| |
| use GMP qw(:all); |
| use GMP::Mpf qw(:all); |
| ($s, $e) = get_str(111.111111111, 10, 4); |
| printf ".$se$e\n"; # .1111e3 |
| ($s, $e) = get_str(1.625, 10); |
| print "0.$s*10^$e\n"; # 0.1625*10^1 |
| ($s, $e) = get_str(mpf(2)**20, 16); |
| printf ".%s@%x\n", $s, $e; # .1@14 |
| |
| C<printf> and C<sprintf> allow formatted output of GMP types. mpz and mpq |
| values can be used with integer conversions (d, o, x, X) and mpf with float |
| conversions (f, e, E, g, G). All the standard perl printf features are |
| available too. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(mpz); |
| use GMP::Mpf qw(mpf); |
| GMP::printf ("%d %d %s", 123, mpz(2)**128, 'foo'); |
| GMP::printf STDERR "%.40f", mpf(1.234); |
| |
| In perl 5.6.1 it doesn't seem to work to export C<printf>, the plain builtin |
| C<printf> is reached unless calls are C<&printf()> style. Explicit use of |
| C<GMP::printf> is suggested. C<sprintf> doesn't suffer this problem. |
| |
| use GMP qw(sprintf); |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(mpq); |
| $s = sprintf "%x", mpq(15,16); |
| |
| C<version> is not exported by default or by tag :all, calling it as |
| C<GMP::version()> is recommended. It returns the GMP library version |
| string, which is not to be confused with the module version number. |
| |
| The other GMP module functions behave as per the corresponding GMP routines, |
| and accept any integer, string, float, mpz, mpq or mpf. For example, |
| |
| use GMP qw(:all); |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(mpz); |
| $z = mpz(123); |
| print sgn($z); # gives 1 |
| |
| Because each of GMP::Mpz, GMP::Mpq and GMP::Mpf is a sub-class of GMP, |
| C<-E<gt>> style calls work too. |
| |
| use GMP qw(:all); |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(mpf); |
| $q = mpq(-5,7); |
| if ($q->integer_p()) # false |
| ... |
| |
| =head2 GMP::Rand |
| |
| This class provides objects holding an algorithm and state for random number |
| generation. C<randstate> creates a new object, for example, |
| |
| use GMP::Rand qw(randstate); |
| $r = randstate(); |
| $r = randstate('lc_2exp_size', 64); |
| $r = randstate('lc_2exp', 43840821, 1, 32); |
| $r = randstate('mt'); |
| $r = randstate($another_r); |
| |
| With no parameters this corresponds to the C function |
| C<gmp_randinit_default>, and is a compromise between speed and randomness. |
| 'lc_2exp_size' corresponds to C<gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size>, 'lc_2exp' |
| corresponds to C<gmp_randinit_lc_2exp>, and 'mt' corresponds to |
| C<gmp_randinit_mt>. Or when passed another randstate object, a copy of that |
| object is made. |
| |
| 'lc_2exp_size' can fail if the requested size is bigger than the internal |
| table provides for, in which case undef is returned. The maximum size |
| currently supported is 128. The other forms always succeed. |
| |
| A randstate can be seeded with an integer or mpz, using the C<seed> method. |
| /dev/random might be a good source of randomness, or time() or |
| Time::HiRes::time() might be adequate, depending on the application. |
| |
| $r->seed(time())); |
| |
| Random numbers can be generated with the following functions, |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item |
| |
| mpf_urandomb, mpz_rrandomb, mpz_urandomb, mpz_urandomm, |
| gmp_urandomb_ui, gmp_urandomm_ui |
| |
| =back |
| |
| Each constructs a new mpz or mpf and with a distribution per the |
| corresponding GMP function. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Rand (:all); |
| $r = randstate(); |
| $a = mpz_urandomb($r,256); # uniform mpz, 256 bits |
| $b = mpz_urandomm($r,mpz(3)**100); # uniform mpz, 0 to 3**100-1 |
| $c = mpz_rrandomb($r,1024); # special mpz, 1024 bits |
| $f = mpf_urandomb($r,128); # uniform mpf, 128 bits, 0<=$f<1 |
| $f = gmp_urandomm_ui($r,56); # uniform int, 0 to 55 |
| |
| =head2 Coercion |
| |
| Arguments to operators and functions are converted as necessary to the |
| appropriate type. For instance C<**> requires an unsigned integer exponent, |
| and an mpq argument will be converted, so long as it's an integer in the |
| appropriate range. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz (mpz); |
| use GMP::Mpq (mpq); |
| $p = mpz(3) ** mpq(45); # allowed, 45 is an integer |
| |
| It's an error if a conversion to an integer or mpz would cause any |
| truncation. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz (mpz); |
| $p = mpz(3) + 1.25; # not allowed |
| $p = mpz(3) + mpz(1.25); # allowed, explicit truncation |
| |
| Comparisons, however, accept any combination of operands and are always done |
| exactly. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz (mpz); |
| print mpz(3) < 3.1; # true |
| |
| Variables used on the left of an assignment operator like C<+=> are subject |
| to coercion too. An integer, float or string will change type when an mpz, |
| mpq or mpf is applied to it. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz (mpz); |
| $a = 1; |
| $a += mpz(1234); # $a becomes an mpz |
| |
| =head2 Overloading |
| |
| The rule for binary operators in the C<overload> mechanism is that if both |
| operands are class objects then the method from the first is used. This |
| determines the result type when mixing GMP classes. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz (mpz); |
| use GMP::Mpq (mpq); |
| use GMP::Mpf (mpf); |
| $z = mpz(123); |
| $q = mpq(3,2); |
| $f = mpf(1.375) |
| print $q+$f; # gives an mpq |
| print $f+$z; # gives an mpf |
| print $z+$f; # not allowed, would lose precision |
| |
| =head2 Constants |
| |
| A special tag C<:constants> is recognised in the module exports list. It |
| doesn't select any functions, but indicates that perl constants should be |
| GMP objects. This can only be used on one of GMP::Mpz, GMP::Mpq or GMP::Mpf |
| at any one time, since they apply different rules. |
| |
| GMP::Mpz will treat constants as mpz's if they're integers, or ordinary |
| floats if not. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(:constants); |
| print 764861287634126387126378128,"\n"; # an mpz |
| print 1.25,"\n"; # a float |
| |
| GMP::Mpq is similar, treating integers as mpq's and leaving floats to the |
| normal perl handling. Something like 3/4 is read as two integer mpq's and a |
| division, but that's fine since it gives the intended fraction. |
| |
| use GMP::Mpq qw(:constants); |
| print 3/4,"\n"; # an mpq |
| print 1.25,"\n"; # a float |
| |
| GMP::Mpf will treat all constants as mpf's using the default precision. |
| BEGIN blocks can be used to set that precision while the code is parsed. |
| For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpf qw(:constants); |
| BEGIN { GMP::Mpf::set_default_prec(256); } |
| print 1/3; |
| BEGIN { GMP::Mpf::set_default_prec(64); } |
| print 5/7; |
| |
| A similar special tag :noconstants is recognised to turn off the constants |
| feature. For example, |
| |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(:constants); |
| print 438249738748174928193,"\n"; # an mpz |
| use GMP::Mpz qw(:noconstants); |
| print 438249738748174928193,"\n"; # now a float |
| |
| All three 'integer', 'binary' and 'float' constant methods are captured. |
| 'float' is captured even for GMP::Mpz and GMP::Mpq since perl by default |
| treats integer strings as floats if they don't fit a plain integer. |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| GMP manual, L<perl>, L<overload>. |
| |
| =head1 BUGS |
| |
| In perl 5.005_03 on i386 FreeBSD, the overloaded constants sometimes provoke |
| seg faults. Don't know if that's a perl bug or a GMP module bug, though it |
| does seem to go bad before reaching anything in GMP.xs. |
| |
| There's no way to specify an arbitrary base when converting a string to an |
| mpz (or mpq or mpf), only hex or octal with 0x or 0 (for mpz and mpq, but |
| not for mpf). |
| |
| These modules are not reentrant or thread safe, due to the implementation of |
| the XSUBs. |
| |
| Returning a new object from the various functions is convenient, but |
| assignment versions could avoid creating new objects. Perhaps they could be |
| named after the C language functions, eg. mpq_inv($q,$q); |
| |
| It'd be good if C<num> and C<den> gave lvalues so the underlying mpq could |
| be manipulated. |
| |
| C<printf> could usefully accept %b for mpz, mpq and mpf, and perhaps %x for |
| mpf too. |
| |
| C<get_str> returning different style values for integer versus float is a |
| bit unfortunate. With mpz, mpq and mpf objects there's no doubt what it |
| will do, but on a plain scalar its action depends on whether the scalar was |
| promoted to a float at any stage, and then on the GMP module rules about |
| using the integer or float part. |
| |
| =head1 INTERNALS |
| |
| In usual perl object style, an mpz is a reference to an object blessed into |
| class C<GMP::Mpz>. The object holds a pointer to the C language C<mpz_t> |
| structure. Similarly for mpq, mpf and randstate. |
| |
| A free list of mpz and mpq values is kept to avoid repeated initializing and |
| clearing when objects are created and destroyed. This aims to help speed, |
| but it's not clear whether it's really needed. |
| |
| mpf doesn't use a free list because the precision of new objects can be |
| different each time. |
| |
| No interface to C<mpf_set_prec_raw> is provided. It wouldn't be very useful |
| since there's no way to make an operation store its result in a particular |
| object. The plain C<set_prec> is useful though, for truncating to a lower |
| precision, or as a sort of directive that subsequent calculations involving |
| that variable should use a higher precision. |
| |
| The overheads of perl dynamic typing (operator dispatch, operand type |
| checking or coercion) will mean this interface is slower than using C |
| directly. |
| |
| Some assertion checking is available as a compile-time option. |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| |
| Copyright 2001-2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| This file is part of the GNU MP Library. |
| |
| The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the terms of either: |
| |
| * the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free |
| Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your |
| option) any later version. |
| |
| or |
| |
| * the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software |
| Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any |
| later version. |
| |
| or both in parallel, as here. |
| |
| The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but |
| WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY |
| or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License |
| for more details. |
| |
| You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License and the |
| GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU MP Library. If not, |
| see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| # Local variables: |
| # perl-indent-level: 2 |
| # fill-column: 76 |
| # End: |