8000 [3.10] bpo-44698: Restore complex pow behaviour for small integral exponents (GH-27772) by miss-islington · Pull Request #27796 · python/cpython · GitHub
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[3.10] bpo-44698: Restore complex pow behaviour for small integral exponents (GH-27772) #27796

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Aug 17, 2021
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bpo-44698: Restore complex pow behaviour for small integral exponents (
…GH-27772)

(cherry picked from commit 4b9a2dc)

Co-authored-by: Mark Dickinson <mdickinson@enthought.com>
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mdickinson authored and miss-islington committed Aug 17, 2021
commit e665e146c3baa9ec2a4c3ceb91e01d1366d3ab49
28 changes: 28 additions & 0 deletions Lib/test/test_complex.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -269,6 +269,34 @@ def test_pow(self):
except OverflowError:
pass

def test_pow_with_small_integer_exponents(self):
# Check that small integer exponents are handled identically
# regardless of their type.
values = [
complex(5.0, 12.0),
complex(5.0e100, 12.0e100),
complex(-4.0, INF),
complex(INF, 0.0),
]
exponents = [-19, -5, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 19]
for value in values:
for exponent in exponents:
with self.subTest(value=value, exponent=exponent):
try:
int_pow = value**exponent
except OverflowError:
int_pow = "overflow"
try:
float_pow = value**float(exponent)
except OverflowError:
float_pow = "overflow"
try:
complex_pow = value**complex(exponent)
except OverflowError:
complex_pow = "overflow"
self.assertEqual(str(float_pow), str(int_pow))
self.assertEqual(str(complex_pow), str(int_pow))

def test_boolcontext(self):
for i in range(100):
self.assertTrue(complex(random() + 1e-6, random() + 1e-6))
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Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
Restore behaviour of complex exponentiation with integer-valued exponent of
type :class:`float` or :class:`complex`.
28 changes: 7 additions & 21 deletions Objects/complexobject.c
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -172,14 +172,7 @@ c_powu(Py_complex x, long n)
static Py_complex
c_powi(Py_complex x, long n)
{
Py_complex cn;

if (n > 100 || n < -100) {
cn.real = (double) n;
cn.imag = 0.;
return _Py_c_pow(x,cn);
}
else if (n > 0)
if (n > 0)
return c_powu(x,n);
else
return _Py_c_quot(c_1, c_powu(x,-n));
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -523,19 +516,12 @@ complex_pow(PyObject *v, PyObject *w, PyObject *z)
return NULL;
}
errno = 0;
// Check if w is an integer value that fits inside a C long, so we can
// use a faster algorithm. TO_COMPLEX(w, b), above, already handled the
// conversion from larger longs, as well as other types.
if (PyLong_Check(w)) {
int overflow = 0;
long int_exponent = PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow(w, &overflow);
if (int_exponent == -1 && PyErr_Occurred())
return NULL;
if (overflow == 0)
p = c_powi(a, int_exponent);
else
p = _Py_c_pow(a, b);
} else {
// Check whether the exponent has a small integer value, and if so use
// a faster and more accurate algorithm.
if (b.imag == 0.0 && b.real == floor(b.real) && fabs(b.real) <= 100.0) {
p = c_powi(a, (long)b.real);
}
else {
p = _Py_c_pow(a, b);
}

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0