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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NUMBERS-120?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Heinrich Bohne resolved NUMBERS-120.
------------------------------------
       Resolution: Fixed
    Fix Version/s: 1.0

> Major loss of precision in BigFraction.doubleValue() and 
> BigFraction.floatValue()
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: NUMBERS-120
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NUMBERS-120
>             Project: Commons Numbers
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: fraction
>    Affects Versions: 1.0
>            Reporter: Heinrich Bohne
>            Priority: Minor
>             Fix For: 1.0
>
>          Time Spent: 1h 10m
>  Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> The method {{BigFraction.doubleValue()}} calculates the double value of 
> fractions with numerators or denominators that, when converted to a 
> {{double}}, round up to {{Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY}}, by right-shifting both 
> the numerator and denominator synchronously until both numbers fit into 1023 
> bits. Apart from the fact that the maximum number of bits an integer 
> representable as a finite {{double}} can have is 1024 (an unbiased exponent 
> of 1023, which is the largest possible unbiased exponent of a {{double}} 
> number, means 1.xxxx ⋅ 2^1023^, which amounts to 1024 bits), this way of 
> converting the fraction to a {{double}} is incredibly wasteful with precision 
> if the numerator and denominator have a different bit length, because the 
> smaller of the two numbers will be truncated beyond what is necessary to 
> represent it as a finite {{double}}. Here is an extreme example:
> The smallest integer that rounds up to {{Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY}} when 
> converted to a {{double}} is 2^1024^ - 2^970^. This is because 
> {{Double.MAX_VALUE}} as an integer is a 1024-bit number with the most 
> significant 53 bits set to 1 and all other 971 bits set to 0. If the 970 
> least significant bits are changed in any way, the number will still round 
> down to {{Double.MAX_VALUE}} as long as the 971st bit remains 0, but as soon 
> as the 971st bit is set to 1, the number will round up to 
> {{Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY}}.
> The smallest possible denominator greater than 1 where a single right-shift 
> will cause a loss of precision is 3. 2^1024^ - 2^970^ is divisible by 3, so 
> in order to create an irreducible fraction, let's add 1 to it:
> (2^1024^ - 2^970^ + 1) / 3 ≈ 5.992310449541053 ⋅ 10^307^ (which can be 
> verified with {{BigDecimal}}, or, more easily, with [this online 
> tool|https://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=(2%5E1024+-+2%5E970+%2B+1)+%2F+3]. 
> However, the current implementation of BigFraction.doubleValue() returns 
> 8.98846567431158 ⋅ 10^307^, which differs from the correct result by a 
> relative error of 50%! The same problem applies to the method 
> {{BigFraction.floatValue()}}.
> This can be prevented by truncating the numerator and denominator separately, 
> so that for each of the two numbers, the maximum possible precision is 
> retained.



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