.Machine {base}R Documentation

Numerical Characteristics of the Machine

Description

.Machine is a variable holding information on the numerical characteristics of the machine R is running on, such as the largest double or integer and the machine's precision.

Usage

.Machine

Details

The algorithm is based on Cody's (1988) subroutine MACHAR.

Note that on most platforms smaller positive values than .Machine$double.xmin can occur. On a typical R platform the smallest positive double is about 5e-324.

Value

A list with components (for simplicity, the prefix “double” is omitted in the explanations)

double.eps the smallest positive floating-point number x such that 1 + x != 1. It equals base^ulp.digits if either base is 2 or rounding is 0; otherwise, it is (base^ulp.digits) / 2.
double.neg.eps a small positive floating-point number x such that 1 - x != 1. It equals base^neg.ulp.digits if base is 2 or round is 0; otherwise, it is (base^neg.ulp.digits) / 2. As neg.ulp.digits is bounded below by -(digits + 3), neg.eps may not be the smallest number that can alter 1 by subtraction.
double.xmin the smallest non-vanishing normalized floating-point power of the radix, i.e., base^min.exp.
double.xmax the largest finite floating-point number. Typically, it is equal to (1 - neg.eps) * base^max.exp, but on some machines it is only the second, or perhaps third, largest number, being too small by 1 or 2 units in the last digit of the significand.
double.base the radix for the floating-point representation
double.digits the number of base digits in the floating-point significand
double.rounding the rounding action.
0 if floating-point addition chops;
1 if floating-point addition rounds, but not in the IEEE style;
2 if floating-point addition rounds in the IEEE style;
3 if floating-point addition chops, and there is partial underflow;
4 if floating-point addition rounds, but not in the IEEE style, and there is partial underflow;
5 if floating-point addition rounds in the IEEE style, and there is partial underflow
double.guard the number of guard digits for multiplication with truncating arithmetic. It is 1 if floating-point arithmetic truncates and more than digits base base digits participate in the post-normalization shift of the floating-point significand in multiplication, and 0 otherwise.
double.ulp.digits the largest negative integer i such that 1 + base^i != 1, except that it is bounded below by -(digits + 3).
double.neg.ulp.digits the largest negative integer i such that 1 - base^i != 1, except that it is bounded below by -(digits + 3).
double.exponent the number of bits (decimal places if base is 10) reserved for the representation of the exponent (including the bias or sign) of a floating-point number
double.min.exp the largest in magnitude negative integer i such that base ^ i is positive and normalized.
double.max.exp the smallest positive power of base that overflows.
integer.max the largest integer which can be represented.
sizeof.long the number of bytes in a C long type.
sizeof.longlong the number of bytes in a C long long type. Will be zero if there is no such type.
sizeof.longdouble the number of bytes in a C long double type. Will be zero if there is no such type.
sizeof.pointer the number of bytes in a C SEXP type.

References

Cody, W. J. (1988) MACHAR: A subroutine to dynamically determine machine parameters. Transactions on Mathematical Software, 14, 4, 303–311.

See Also

.Platform for details of the platform.

Examples

.Machine
## or for a neat printout
noquote(unlist(format(.Machine)))

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