Thread overview
Disallow (dis)equality with FP.nan/FP.init literals
Apr 19, 2012
bearophile
Apr 19, 2012
so
Apr 19, 2012
so
Apr 19, 2012
Maxim
Apr 19, 2012
Ali Çehreli
Apr 19, 2012
Somedude
April 19, 2012
This is an open enhancement request that I'll probably add to Bugzilla.
The direct cause of it is a recent discussion in D.learn, but I and other people are aware of this problem for a lot of time.


Since a lot of time D statically refuses the use of "classReference == null":

// Program #1
class Foo {}
void main() {
    Foo f;
    assert(f == null);
    assert(f != null);
}


test.d(4): Error: use 'is' instead of '==' when comparing with null
test.d(5): Error: use '!is' instead of '!=' when comparing with null



A not expert D programmer sometimes compares a double with double.nan in a wrong way:

http://forum.dlang.org/thread/mailman.1845.1334694574.4860.digitalmars-d-learn@puremagic.com#post-jmlhfr:2428cv:241:40digitalmars.com

because someDouble == double.nan is always false:


// Program #2
import std.math: isNaN;
void main() {
    double x = double.init;
    assert(x != double.nan);
    assert(x != double.init);
    assert(isNaN(x));
    assert(x is double.init);
    assert(x !is double.nan);

    double y = double.nan;
    assert(y != double.nan);
    assert(y != double.init);
    assert(isNaN(y));
    assert(y !is double.init);
    assert(y is double.nan);
}



I think there are three common wrong usage patterns of NaNs testing:
1) Test that x is equal to/different from nan using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
2) Test that x is equal to/different from all NaNs using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
3) Test that x is equal to/different from FP.init using x==FP.init/x!=FP.init

The case 3 is a bit less important because the programmer already knows something about FP init, but it's wrong still.

There are other wrong usages of NaNs but they are by more expert programmers, to I don't want to catch them (example: using "is" to test if x is equal to/different from all NaNs is a bug, because there are more than one NaN. But if the programmer uses "is" I assume he/she/shi knows enough about NaNs, so this is not flagged by the compiler).

Currently this program compiles with no errors:


// Program #3
void main() {
    float x1 = float.nan;
    assert(x1 == float.nan);
    float x2 = 0.0;
    assert(x2 != float.nan);
    float x3 = float.init;
    assert(x3 == float.init);
    float x4 = 0.0;
    assert(x4 != float.init);

    double x5 = double.nan;
    assert(x5 == double.nan);
    double x6 = 0.0;
    assert(x6 != double.nan);
    double x7 = double.init;
    assert(x7 == double.init);
    double x8 = 0.0;
    assert(x8 != double.init);

    real x9 = real.nan;
    assert(x9 == real.nan);
    real x10 = 0.0;
    assert(x10 != real.nan);
    real x11 = real.init;
    assert(x11 == real.init);
    real x12 = 0.0;
    assert(x12 != real.init);

    enum double myNaN = double.nan;
    assert(myNaN == double.nan);
}



So I propose to statically disallow comparisons of Program #3, so it generates errors similar to:

test.d(4): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.nan' for this specific NaN
test.d(6): Error: comparison is always true. Use '!std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or '!is float.nan' for this specific NaN
test.d(8): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.init' for this specicif NaN
...


Opinions, improvements, votes or critics are welcome.

Bye,
bearophile
April 19, 2012
On Thursday, 19 April 2012 at 00:50:09 UTC, bearophile wrote:
> This is an open enhancement request that I'll probably add to Bugzilla.
> The direct cause of it is a recent discussion in D.learn, but I and other people are aware of this problem for a lot of time.
>
>
> Since a lot of time D statically refuses the use of "classReference == null":
>
> // Program #1
> class Foo {}
> void main() {
>     Foo f;
>     assert(f == null);
>     assert(f != null);
> }
>
>
> test.d(4): Error: use 'is' instead of '==' when comparing with null
> test.d(5): Error: use '!is' instead of '!=' when comparing with null
>
>
>
> A not expert D programmer sometimes compares a double with double.nan in a wrong way:
>
> http://forum.dlang.org/thread/mailman.1845.1334694574.4860.digitalmars-d-learn@puremagic.com#post-jmlhfr:2428cv:241:40digitalmars.com
>
> because someDouble == double.nan is always false:
>
>
> // Program #2
> import std.math: isNaN;
> void main() {
>     double x = double.init;
>     assert(x != double.nan);
>     assert(x != double.init);
>     assert(isNaN(x));
>     assert(x is double.init);
>     assert(x !is double.nan);
>
>     double y = double.nan;
>     assert(y != double.nan);
>     assert(y != double.init);
>     assert(isNaN(y));
>     assert(y !is double.init);
>     assert(y is double.nan);
> }
>
>
>
> I think there are three common wrong usage patterns of NaNs testing:
> 1) Test that x is equal to/different from nan using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
> 2) Test that x is equal to/different from all NaNs using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
> 3) Test that x is equal to/different from FP.init using x==FP.init/x!=FP.init
>
> The case 3 is a bit less important because the programmer already knows something about FP init, but it's wrong still.
>
> There are other wrong usages of NaNs but they are by more expert programmers, to I don't want to catch them (example: using "is" to test if x is equal to/different from all NaNs is a bug, because there are more than one NaN. But if the programmer uses "is" I assume he/she/shi knows enough about NaNs, so this is not flagged by the compiler).
>
> Currently this program compiles with no errors:
>
>
> // Program #3
> void main() {
>     float x1 = float.nan;
>     assert(x1 == float.nan);
>     float x2 = 0.0;
>     assert(x2 != float.nan);
>     float x3 = float.init;
>     assert(x3 == float.init);
>     float x4 = 0.0;
>     assert(x4 != float.init);
>
>     double x5 = double.nan;
>     assert(x5 == double.nan);
>     double x6 = 0.0;
>     assert(x6 != double.nan);
>     double x7 = double.init;
>     assert(x7 == double.init);
>     double x8 = 0.0;
>     assert(x8 != double.init);
>
>     real x9 = real.nan;
>     assert(x9 == real.nan);
>     real x10 = 0.0;
>     assert(x10 != real.nan);
>     real x11 = real.init;
>     assert(x11 == real.init);
>     real x12 = 0.0;
>     assert(x12 != real.init);
>
>     enum double myNaN = double.nan;
>     assert(myNaN == double.nan);
> }
>
>
>
> So I propose to statically disallow comparisons of Program #3, so it generates errors similar to:
>
> test.d(4): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.nan' for this specific NaN
> test.d(6): Error: comparison is always true. Use '!std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or '!is float.nan' for this specific NaN
> test.d(8): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.init' for this specicif NaN
> ...
>
>
> Opinions, improvements, votes or critics are welcome.
>
> Bye,
> bearophile

Good idea.
But nothing beats this:

int main() {
    double  q;
    q = 3.0/7.0;
    if (q == 3.0/7.0) printf("Equal\n");
    else printf("Not Equal\n");
    return 0;
}

http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19957-01/806-3568/ncg_goldberg.html
Should we disable implicit conversion "at" comparison as well?
April 19, 2012
On Thursday, 19 April 2012 at 01:28:51 UTC, so wrote:
> On Thursday, 19 April 2012 at 00:50:09 UTC, bearophile wrote:
>> This is an open enhancement request that I'll probably add to Bugzilla.
>> The direct cause of it is a recent discussion in D.learn, but I and other people are aware of this problem for a lot of time.
>>
>>
>> Since a lot of time D statically refuses the use of "classReference == null":
>>
>> // Program #1
>> class Foo {}
>> void main() {
>>    Foo f;
>>    assert(f == null);
>>    assert(f != null);
>> }
>>
>>
>> test.d(4): Error: use 'is' instead of '==' when comparing with null
>> test.d(5): Error: use '!is' instead of '!=' when comparing with null
>>
>>
>>
>> A not expert D programmer sometimes compares a double with double.nan in a wrong way:
>>
>> http://forum.dlang.org/thread/mailman.1845.1334694574.4860.digitalmars-d-learn@puremagic.com#post-jmlhfr:2428cv:241:40digitalmars.com
>>
>> because someDouble == double.nan is always false:
>>
>>
>> // Program #2
>> import std.math: isNaN;
>> void main() {
>>    double x = double.init;
>>    assert(x != double.nan);
>>    assert(x != double.init);
>>    assert(isNaN(x));
>>    assert(x is double.init);
>>    assert(x !is double.nan);
>>
>>    double y = double.nan;
>>    assert(y != double.nan);
>>    assert(y != double.init);
>>    assert(isNaN(y));
>>    assert(y !is double.init);
>>    assert(y is double.nan);
>> }
>>
>>
>>
>> I think there are three common wrong usage patterns of NaNs testing:
>> 1) Test that x is equal to/different from nan using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
>> 2) Test that x is equal to/different from all NaNs using x==FP.nan/x!=FP.nan
>> 3) Test that x is equal to/different from FP.init using x==FP.init/x!=FP.init
>>
>> The case 3 is a bit less important because the programmer already knows something about FP init, but it's wrong still.
>>
>> There are other wrong usages of NaNs but they are by more expert programmers, to I don't want to catch them (example: using "is" to test if x is equal to/different from all NaNs is a bug, because there are more than one NaN. But if the programmer uses "is" I assume he/she/shi knows enough about NaNs, so this is not flagged by the compiler).
>>
>> Currently this program compiles with no errors:
>>
>>
>> // Program #3
>> void main() {
>>    float x1 = float.nan;
>>    assert(x1 == float.nan);
>>    float x2 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x2 != float.nan);
>>    float x3 = float.init;
>>    assert(x3 == float.init);
>>    float x4 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x4 != float.init);
>>
>>    double x5 = double.nan;
>>    assert(x5 == double.nan);
>>    double x6 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x6 != double.nan);
>>    double x7 = double.init;
>>    assert(x7 == double.init);
>>    double x8 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x8 != double.init);
>>
>>    real x9 = real.nan;
>>    assert(x9 == real.nan);
>>    real x10 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x10 != real.nan);
>>    real x11 = real.init;
>>    assert(x11 == real.init);
>>    real x12 = 0.0;
>>    assert(x12 != real.init);
>>
>>    enum double myNaN = double.nan;
>>    assert(myNaN == double.nan);
>> }
>>
>>
>>
>> So I propose to statically disallow comparisons of Program #3, so it generates errors similar to:
>>
>> test.d(4): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.nan' for this specific NaN
>> test.d(6): Error: comparison is always true. Use '!std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or '!is float.nan' for this specific NaN
>> test.d(8): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.init' for this specicif NaN
>> ...
>>
>>
>> Opinions, improvements, votes or critics are welcome.
>>
>> Bye,
>> bearophile
>
> Good idea.
> But nothing beats this:
>
> int main() {
>     double  q;
>     q = 3.0/7.0;
>     if (q == 3.0/7.0) printf("Equal\n");
>     else printf("Not Equal\n");
>     return 0;
> }
>
> http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19957-01/806-3568/ncg_goldberg.html
> Should we disable implicit conversion "at" comparison as well?

s/double/float/

"double" version also problematic but for another case.
April 19, 2012
On 04/18/2012 05:50 PM, bearophile wrote:
> This is an open enhancement request that I'll probably add to Bugzilla.
> The direct cause of it is a recent discussion in D.learn, but I and
> other people are aware of this problem for a lot of time.

[...]

> assert(myNaN == double.nan);
> }
>
>
>
> So I propose to statically disallow comparisons of Program #3, so it
> generates errors similar to:
>
> test.d(4): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to
> test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.nan' for this specific NaN

+1. This enhancement will be helpful.

Ali

April 19, 2012
Le 19/04/2012 02:50, bearophile a écrit :
> This is an open enhancement request that I'll probably add to Bugzilla.
...
> So I propose to statically disallow comparisons of Program #3, so it generates errors similar to:
> 
> test.d(4): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.nan' for this specific NaN test.d(6): Error: comparison is always true. Use '!std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or '!is float.nan' for this specific NaN test.d(8): Error: comparison is always false. Use 'std.math.isNaN' to test for every kind of NaN or 'is float.init' for this specicif NaN ...
> 
> 
> Opinions, improvements, votes or critics are welcome.
> 
> Bye,
> bearophile

Looks like a good one !
April 19, 2012
On Thursday, 19 April 2012 at 01:28:51 UTC, so wrote:
> Good idea.
> But nothing beats this:
>
> int main() {
>     double  q;
>     q = 3.0/7.0;
>     if (q == 3.0/7.0) printf("Equal\n");
>     else printf("Not Equal\n");
>     return 0;
> }
>
> http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19957-01/806-3568/ncg_goldberg.html
> Should we disable implicit conversion "at" comparison as well?

Gcc has warning option for comparing floats or doubles. I think it would be good idea to introduce warnings (or errors) in dmd too.