Security News
Node.js EOL Versions CVE Dubbed the "Worst CVE of the Year" by Security Experts
Critics call the Node.js EOL CVE a misuse of the system, sparking debate over CVE standards and the growing noise in vulnerability databases.
big-rational
Advanced tools
BigRational.js is an arbitrary-length rational number library for Javascript, allowing arithmetic operations on rational numbers of unlimited size, notwithstanding memory and time limitations.
A rational number is stored internally as a pair of two big integers. Because of this, BigRational.js depends on my big integer library, BigInteger.js.
If you are using a browser, you can download BigRational.js from GitHub or just hotlink to it.
<script src="http://peterolson.github.com/BigRational.js/BigInt_BigRat.min.js"></script>
This will include both the bigInt
library and the bigRat
library. If you want to reference them separately, you can use the non-combined BigRational.js script.
If you are using node, you can install BigRational.js with npm.
npm install big-rational
Then you can include it in your code
var bigRat = require("big-rational");
bigRat(num?, denom?)
You can create a bigRational by calling the bigRat
function. You can pass in up to two paramers.
bigRat()
If you pass in zero parameters, it will return zero.
bigRat(n)
If you pass in one parameter, it must be one of the following:
"12345"
,"2/3"
,"1_1/2"
"54.05446"
bigRat(num, denom)
If you pass in two parameters, the first will be interpreted as the numerator, and the second as the denominator. Both parameters must be one of the following:
"12345"
12345
Examples:
var zero = bigRat();
var threeFourths = bigRat("3/4") ||
bigRat("3", "4") ||
bigRat(3, 4) ||
bigRat(3 / 4) ||
bigRat(0.75);
var fiveHalves = bigRat("5/2") ||
bigRat("2_1/2");
Note that bigRat operations return bigRats, which allows you to chain methods, for example:
var salary = bigRat(dollarsPerHour).times(hoursWorked).plus(randomBonuses)
There are three constants already stored that you do not have to construct with the bigRat
function yourself:
bigRat.one
, equivalent to bigRat(1)
bigRat.zero
, equivalent to bigRat(0)
bigRat.minusOne
, equivalent to bigRat(-1)
You can obtain the numerator and denominator of a bigRational with these properties:
numerator
Returns the numerator of a bigRational. This will be a bigInt.
bigRat(34, 3).numerator
=> bigInt(34)
denominator
Returns the denominator of a bigRational. This will be a bigInt.
bigRat(34, 3).denominator
=> bigInt(3)
num
Alias for the numerator
property
denom
Alias for the denominator
property
abs
Returns the absolute value of a number.
bigRat(-424).abs().equals(424)
add
Performs addition.
bigRat("1/3").add(1, 3).equals(2, 3)
ceil(toBigInt?)
Rounds up to the nearest integer. If the toBigInt
argument is true
, then it will return a bigInteger instead of a bigRational.
bigRat(12345.4).ceil().equals(12346)
compareAbs
Performs a comparison between the absolute values of two numbers. If the numbers are of equal magnitude, it returns 0
. If the first number is of greater magnitude, it returns 1
. Otherwise, it returns -1
.
bigRat(-3).compareAbs(3) === 0
bigRat(3).compareAbs(-4) === -1
bigRat(-4).compareAbs(3) === 1
compare
Performs a comparison between two numbers. If the numbers are equal, it returns 0
. If the first number is greater, it returns 1
. If the first number is lesser, it returns -1
.
bigRat(3).compare(3) === 0
bigRat(3).compare(4) === -1
bigRat(4).compare(3) === 1
compareTo
Alias for the compare
function.
divide
Performs division.
bigRat("354.25").divide(1, 4).equals(1417)
eq
Alias for the equals
function.
equals
Checks if two numbers are equal.
bigRat(1).equals(1)
floor(toBigInt?)
Rounds down to the nearest integer. If the toBigInt
argument is true
, then it will return a bigInteger instead of a bigRational.
bigRat(987.99999).floor().equals(987)
geq
Alias for the greaterOrEquals
function.
greater
Checks if the first number is greater than the second
bigRat(5).greater(4)
greaterOrEquals
Checks if the first number is greater than or equal to the second
bigRat(5).greaterOrEquals(5)
bigRat(5).greaterOrEquals(4)
gt
Alias for the greater
function.
isNegative
Returns true
if the number is negative, false
otherwise.
bigRat(-7).isNegative()
isPositive
Returns true
if the number is positive, false
otherwise.
bigRat(7).isPositive()
isZero
Returns true
if the number equals 0, false
otherwise.
bigRat(0).isZero()
lesser
Checks if the first number is lesser than the second
bigRat(4).lesser(5)
lesserOrEquals
Checks if the first number is lesser than or equal to the second
bigRat(4).lesserOrEquals(4)
bigRat(4).lesserOrEquals(5)
leq
Alias for the lesserOrEquals
function.
lt
Alias for the lesser
function.
minus
Alias for subtract
.
mod
Performs the modulo operation.
bigRat(3).mod(2).equals(1)
multiply
Performs multiplication.
bigRat(70, 2).multiply(4).equals(140)
negate
Returns the negation of a number.
bigRat(234).negate().equals(-234)
neq
Alias for the notEquals
function.
notEquals
Checks if two numbers are not equal.
bigRat(1).notEquals(2)
over
Alias for divide
.
plus
Alias for add
.
pow
Performs exponentiation. The argument will be parsed as a bigInt.
bigRat("3/2").pow(3)
=> bigRat("27/8")
reciprocate
Returns the reciprocal of a number.
bigRat("3/2").reciprocate()
=> bigRat("2/3")
round(toBigInt?)
Rounds a number to the nearest integer. If the number is exactly half-way between two integers, it will round up.
If the toBigInt
argument is true
, then it will return a bigInteger instead of a bigRational.
bigRat(54345.12566).round().equals(54345)
bigRat(1234567.5).round().equals(1234568)
bigRat(69.8).round().equals(70)
subtract
Performs subtraction.
bigRat(3).subtract(2).equals(1)
times
Alias for multiply
.
toDecimal(digits?)
Converts a bigRational to a string in decimal notation, cut off after the number of digits specified in the digits
argument. The default number of digits is 10.
bigRat(1,3).toDecimal() === "0.33333333333"
bigRat(1,7).toDecimal(14) === "0.14285714285714"
toString()
Converts a bigRat to a string in "numerator/denominator" notation.
bigRat(145.545).toString() === "29109/200"
valueOf()
Converts a bigRat to a native Javascript number. This override allows you to use native arithmetic operators without explicit conversion:
bigRat(1, 4) + bigRat(3, 4) === 1
FAQs
An arbitrary length rational number library for Javascript
The npm package big-rational receives a total of 1,307 weekly downloads. As such, big-rational popularity was classified as popular.
We found that big-rational demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Critics call the Node.js EOL CVE a misuse of the system, sparking debate over CVE standards and the growing noise in vulnerability databases.
Security News
cURL and Go security teams are publicly rejecting CVSS as flawed for assessing vulnerabilities and are calling for more accurate, context-aware approaches.
Security News
Bun 1.2 enhances its JavaScript runtime with 90% Node.js compatibility, built-in S3 and Postgres support, HTML Imports, and faster, cloud-first performance.