[issue3724] math.log(x, 10) gives different result than math.log10(x)
Mark Dickinson
report at bugs.python.org
Thu Oct 9 16:25:53 CEST 2008
Mark Dickinson <dickinsm at gmail.com> added the comment:
> Mark, is some of the inaccuracy due to double rounding?
No, I don't think so; at least, not in the sense of rounding the same
value twice (with different precisions). I get similar results on my
Core 2 Duo machine, which should be immune to x87 style problems
(because Apple's gcc turns sse instructions on by default, I guess).
It's just a result of three separate rounds: one for each log, and one
for the result of the division.
> Could we make the two argument form more accurate by allowing the
> compiler to generate code that uses full internal precision,
> log(n)/log(d), instead of prematurely forcing the intermediate results
> to a PyFloat?
Seems to me that would only work on older x86 hardware, unless we
deliberately use long double in place of double for the intermediate
results.
Personally, I don't think it's worth the effort of fixing this: the
result of log(x, 10) is accurate to within a few ulps anyway, which
should be plenty good enough for any well-coded numerical work: any
numerically aware programmer should be well aware that it's dangerous to
rely on floating-point operations giving exact results.
And in any case there's always log10.
As a separate issue, it may be worth exposing C99's log2 function in
some future version of Python. This, presumably, can be relied upon
always to give exact results for powers of 2, which could be useful in
some applications.
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