Module Base__.Int32

include Base__.Int_intf.S with type t = int32
type t
include Base.Sexpable.S with type t := t
type t
val t_of_sexp : Sexplib0.Sexp.t -> t
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.t
val t_sexp_grammar : Base.Sexp.Private.Raw_grammar.t
include Base.Floatable.S with type t := t
type t
val of_float : float -> t
val to_float : t -> float
include Base.Intable.S with type t := t
type t
val of_int_exn : int -> t
val to_int_exn : t -> int
include Base.Identifiable.S with type t := t
type t
val hash_fold_t : Base.Hash.state -> t -> Base.Hash.state
val hash : t -> Base.Hash.hash_value
include Base.Sexpable.S with type t := t
type t
val t_of_sexp : Sexplib0.Sexp.t -> t
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.t
include Base.Stringable.S with type t := t
type t
val of_string : string -> t
val to_string : t -> string
include Base.Comparable.S with type t := t
include Base__.Comparable_intf.Polymorphic_compare
include Base.Comparisons.Infix
type t
val (>=) : t -> t -> bool
val (<=) : t -> t -> bool
val (=) : t -> t -> bool
val (>) : t -> t -> bool
val (<) : t -> t -> bool
val (<>) : t -> t -> bool
val equal : t -> t -> bool
val compare : t -> t -> int

compare t1 t2 returns 0 if t1 is equal to t2, a negative integer if t1 is less than t2, and a positive integer if t1 is greater than t2.

val min : t -> t -> t
val max : t -> t -> t
val ascending : t -> t -> int

ascending is identical to compare. descending x y = ascending y x. These are intended to be mnemonic when used like List.sort ~compare:ascending and List.sort ~cmp:descending, since they cause the list to be sorted in ascending or descending order, respectively.

val descending : t -> t -> int
val between : t -> low:t -> high:t -> bool

between t ~low ~high means low <= t <= high

val clamp_exn : t -> min:t -> max:t -> t

clamp_exn t ~min ~max returns t', the closest value to t such that between t' ~low:min ~high:max is true.

Raises if not (min <= max).

val clamp : t -> min:t -> max:t -> t Base.Or_error.t
include Base.Comparator.S with type t := t
type t
type comparator_witness
val comparator : (tcomparator_witness) Base.Comparator.comparator
include Base__.Comparable_intf.Validate with type t := t
type t
val validate_lbound : min:t Base.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base.Validate.check
val validate_ubound : max:t Base.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base.Validate.check
val validate_bound : min:t Base.Maybe_bound.t -> max:t Base.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base.Validate.check
include Base.Pretty_printer.S with type t := t
type t
val pp : Base.Formatter.t -> t -> unit
include Base.Comparable.With_zero with type t := t
type t
val validate_positive : t Base.Validate.check
val validate_non_negative : t Base.Validate.check
val validate_negative : t Base.Validate.check
val validate_non_positive : t Base.Validate.check
val is_positive : t -> bool
val is_non_negative : t -> bool
val is_negative : t -> bool
val is_non_positive : t -> bool
val sign : t -> Base__.Sign0.t

Returns Neg, Zero, or Pos in a way consistent with the above functions.

include Base.Invariant.S with type t := t
type t
val invariant : t Base__.Invariant_intf.inv
include Base__.Int_intf.Hexable with type t := t
type t
module Hex : sig ... end
val to_string_hum : ?⁠delimiter:char -> t -> string

delimiter is an underscore by default.

Infix operators and constants

val zero : t
val one : t
val minus_one : t
val (+) : t -> t -> t
val (-) : t -> t -> t
val (*) : t -> t -> t
val (**) : t -> t -> t

Integer exponentiation

val neg : t -> t
val (~-) : t -> t
val (/%) : t -> t -> t
val (%) : t -> t -> t
val (/) : t -> t -> t
val rem : t -> t -> t
val (//) : t -> t -> float

Float division of integers.

val (land) : t -> t -> t

Same as bit_and.

val (lor) : t -> t -> t

Same as bit_or.

val (lxor) : t -> t -> t

Same as bit_xor.

val (lnot) : t -> t

Same as bit_not.

val (lsl) : t -> int -> t

Same as shift_left.

val (asr) : t -> int -> t

Same as shift_right.

Other common functions

include Base__.Int_intf.Round with type t := t
type t
val round : ?⁠dir:[ `Zero | `Nearest | `Up | `Down ] -> t -> to_multiple_of:t -> t
val round_towards_zero : t -> to_multiple_of:t -> t
val round_down : t -> to_multiple_of:t -> t
val round_up : t -> to_multiple_of:t -> t
val round_nearest : t -> to_multiple_of:t -> t
val abs : t -> t

Returns the absolute value of the argument. May be negative if the input is min_value.

Successor and predecessor functions

val succ : t -> t
val pred : t -> t

Exponentiation

val pow : t -> t -> t

pow base exponent returns base raised to the power of exponent. It is OK if base <= 0. pow raises if exponent < 0, or an integer overflow would occur.

Bit-wise logical operations

val bit_and : t -> t -> t

These are identical to land, lor, etc. except they're not infix and have different names.

val bit_or : t -> t -> t
val bit_xor : t -> t -> t
val bit_not : t -> t
val popcount : t -> int

Returns the number of 1 bits in the binary representation of the input.

Bit-shifting operations

The results are unspecified for negative shifts and shifts >= num_bits.

val shift_left : t -> int -> t

Shifts left, filling in with zeroes.

val shift_right : t -> int -> t

Shifts right, preserving the sign of the input.

Increment and decrement functions for integer references

val decr : t Base__.Import.ref -> unit
val incr : t Base__.Import.ref -> unit
val of_int32_exn : int32 -> t
val to_int32_exn : t -> int32
val of_int64_exn : int64 -> t
val to_int64 : t -> int64
val of_nativeint_exn : nativeint -> t
val to_nativeint_exn : t -> nativeint
val of_float_unchecked : float -> t

of_float_unchecked truncates the given floating point number to an integer, rounding towards zero. The result is unspecified if the argument is nan or falls outside the range of representable integers.

val num_bits : int

The number of bits available in this integer type. Note that the integer representations are signed.

val max_value : t

The largest representable integer.

val min_value : t

The smallest representable integer.

val (lsr) : t -> int -> t

Same as shift_right_logical.

val shift_right_logical : t -> int -> t

Shifts right, filling in with zeroes, which will not preserve the sign of the input.

val ceil_pow2 : t -> t

ceil_pow2 x returns the smallest power of 2 that is greater than or equal to x. The implementation may only be called for x > 0. Example: ceil_pow2 17 = 32

val floor_pow2 : t -> t

floor_pow2 x returns the largest power of 2 that is less than or equal to x. The implementation may only be called for x > 0. Example: floor_pow2 17 = 16

val ceil_log2 : t -> int

ceil_log2 x returns the ceiling of log-base-2 of x, and raises if x <= 0.

val floor_log2 : t -> int

floor_log2 x returns the floor of log-base-2 of x, and raises if x <= 0.

val is_pow2 : t -> bool

is_pow2 x returns true iff x is a power of 2. is_pow2 raises if x <= 0.

val clz : t -> int

Returns the number of leading zeros in the binary representation of the input, as an integer between 0 and one less than num_bits.

The results are unspecified for t = 0.

val ctz : t -> int

Returns the number of trailing zeros in the binary representation of the input, as an integer between 0 and one less than num_bits.

The results are unspecified for t = 0.

module O : Base__.Int_intf.Operators with type t := t

A sub-module designed to be opened to make working with ints more convenient.

Conversion functions

val of_int : int -> t option
val to_int : t -> int option
val of_int32 : int32 -> t
val to_int32 : t -> int32
val of_nativeint : nativeint -> t option
val to_nativeint : t -> nativeint
val of_int64 : int64 -> t option

Truncating conversions

These functions return the least-significant bits of the input. In cases where optional conversions return Some x, truncating conversions return x.

val of_int_trunc : int -> t
val to_int_trunc : t -> int
val of_nativeint_trunc : nativeint -> t
val of_int64_trunc : int64 -> t

Low-level float conversions

val bits_of_float : float -> t

Rounds a regular 64-bit OCaml float to a 32-bit IEEE-754 "single" float, and returns its bit representation. We make no promises about the exact rounding behavior, or what happens in case of over- or underflow.

val float_of_bits : t -> float

Creates a 32-bit IEEE-754 "single" float from the given bits, and converts it to a regular 64-bit OCaml float.

Byte swap operations

See Int's byte swap section for a description of Base's approach to exposing byte swap primitives.

When compiling for 64-bit machines, if signedness of the output value does not matter, use byteswap functions for int64, if possible, for better performance. As of writing, 32-bit byte swap operations on 64-bit machines have extra overhead for moving to 32-bit registers and sign-extending values when returning to 64-bit registers.

The x86 instruction sequence that demonstrates the overhead is in base/bench/bench_int.ml

val bswap16 : t -> t
val bswap32 : t -> t