FiniteDouble

The companion object for FiniteDouble that offers factory methods that produce FiniteDoubles, implicit widening conversions from FiniteDouble to other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for FiniteDouble.

Companion:
class
Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
class Object
trait Matchable
class Any

Value members

Concrete methods

def ensuringValid(value: Double): FiniteDouble

A factory/assertion method that produces a FiniteDouble given a valid Double value, or throws AssertionError, if given an invalid Double value.

A factory/assertion method that produces a FiniteDouble given a valid Double value, or throws AssertionError, if given an invalid Double value.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value. Otherwise, the passed Double value is not finite, so this method will throw AssertionError.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas from inspects Double values at run time. It differs from a vanilla assert or ensuring call in that you get something you didn't already have if the assertion succeeds: a type that promises a Double is finite.

Value parameters:
value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return wrapped in a FiniteDouble.

Returns:

the specified Double value wrapped in a FiniteDouble, if it is finite, else throws AssertionError.

Throws:
AssertionError

if the passed value is not finite

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def from(value: Double): Option[FiniteDouble]

A factory method that produces an Option[FiniteDouble] given a Double value.

A factory method that produces an Option[FiniteDouble] given a Double value.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value, wrapped in a Some. Otherwise, the passed Double value is not finite, so this method will return None.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas from inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return wrapped in a Some[FiniteDouble].

Returns:

the specified Double value wrapped in a Some[FiniteDouble], if it is FiniteDouble, else None.

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def fromOrElse(value: Double, default: => FiniteDouble): FiniteDouble

A factory method that produces a FiniteDouble given a Double value and a default FiniteDouble.

A factory method that produces a FiniteDouble given a Double value and a default FiniteDouble.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value. Otherwise, the passed Double value is finite, so this method will return the passed default value.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas from inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
default

the FiniteDouble to return if the passed Double value is not finite.

value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return.

Returns:

the specified Double value wrapped in a FiniteDouble, if it is finite, else the default FiniteDouble value.

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def goodOrElse[B](value: Double)(f: Double => B): Or[FiniteDouble, B]

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Good, given a valid Double value, or if the given Double is invalid, an error value of type B produced by passing the given invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Bad.

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Good, given a valid Double value, or if the given Double is invalid, an error value of type B produced by passing the given invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Bad.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value, wrapped in a Good. Otherwise, the passed Double value is not finite, so this method will return a result of type B obtained by passing the invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Bad.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas this method inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return wrapped in a Good(FiniteDouble).

Returns:

the specified Double value wrapped in a Good(FiniteDouble), if it is finite, else a Bad(f(value)).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def isValid(value: Double): Boolean

A predicate method that returns true if a given Double value is finite.

A predicate method that returns true if a given Double value is finite.

Value parameters:
value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return true.

Returns:

true if the specified Double is positive, else false.

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def passOrElse[E](value: Double)(f: Double => E): Validation[E]

A validation method that produces a Pass given a valid Double value, or an error value of type E produced by passing the given invalid Int value to the given function f, wrapped in a Fail.

A validation method that produces a Pass given a valid Double value, or an error value of type E produced by passing the given invalid Int value to the given function f, wrapped in a Fail.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a Pass. Otherwise, the passed Double value is finite, so this method will return a result of type E obtained by passing the invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Fail.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas this method inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Int to validate that it is finite.

Returns:

a Pass if the specified Int value is finite, else a Fail containing an error value produced by passing the specified Double to the given function f.

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def rightOrElse[L](value: Double)(f: Double => L): Either[L, FiniteDouble]

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Right, given a valid Double value, or if the given Double is invalid, an error value of type L produced by passing the given invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Left.

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Right, given a valid Double value, or if the given Double is invalid, an error value of type L produced by passing the given invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Left.

This method will inspect the passed Double value and if it is a finite Double, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value, wrapped in a Right. Otherwise, the passed Double value is not finite, so this method will return a result of type L obtained by passing the invalid Double value to the given function f, wrapped in a Left.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas this method inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Double to inspect, and if finite, return wrapped in a Right(FiniteDouble).

Returns:

the specified Double value wrapped in a Right(FiniteDouble), if it is finite, else a Left(f(value)).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
def tryingValid(value: Double): Try[FiniteDouble]

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Success, given a valid Float value, or if the given Float is invalid, an AssertionError, wrapped in a Failure.

A factory/validation method that produces a FiniteDouble, wrapped in a Success, given a valid Float value, or if the given Float is invalid, an AssertionError, wrapped in a Failure.

Note: you should use this method only when you are convinced that it will always succeed, i.e., never throw an exception. It is good practice to add a comment near the invocation of this method indicating ''why'' you think it will always succeed to document your reasoning. If you are not sure an ensuringValid call will always succeed, you should use one of the other factory or validation methods provided on this object instead: isValid, tryingValid, passOrElse, goodOrElse, or rightOrElse.

This method will inspect the passed Float value and if it is a finite Float, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value, wrapped in a Success. Otherwise, the passed Float value is not finite, so this method will return an AssertionError, wrapped in a Failure.

This factory method differs from the apply factory method in that apply is implemented via a macro that inspects Float literals at compile time, whereas this method inspects Float values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Float to inspect, and if finite, return wrapped in a Success(FiniteDouble).

Returns:

the specified Float value wrapped in a Success(FiniteDouble), if it is finite, else a Failure(AssertionError).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala

Concrete fields

The largest value representable as a finite Double, which is FiniteDouble(1.7976931348623157E308).

The largest value representable as a finite Double, which is FiniteDouble(1.7976931348623157E308).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala

The smallest positive value greater than 0.0d representable as a FiniteDouble, which is FiniteDouble(4.9E-324).

The smallest positive value greater than 0.0d representable as a FiniteDouble, which is FiniteDouble(4.9E-324).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala

The smallest value representable as a finite Double, which is FiniteDouble(-1.7976931348623157E308).

The smallest value representable as a finite Double, which is FiniteDouble(-1.7976931348623157E308).

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala

Implicits

Implicits

implicit inline def apply(value: => Double): FiniteDouble

A factory method, implemented via a macro, that produces a FiniteDouble if passed a valid Double literal, otherwise a compile time error.

A factory method, implemented via a macro, that produces a FiniteDouble if passed a valid Double literal, otherwise a compile time error.

The macro that implements this method will inspect the specified Double expression at compile time. If the expression is a finite Double literal, it will return a FiniteDouble representing that value. Otherwise, the passed Double expression is either a literal that is not finite, or is not a literal, so this method will give a compiler error.

This factory method differs from the from factory method in that this method is implemented via a macro that inspects Double literals at compile time, whereas from inspects Double values at run time.

Value parameters:
value

the Double literal expression to inspect at compile time, and if finite, to return wrapped in a FiniteDouble at run time.

Returns:

the specified, valid Double literal value wrapped in a FiniteDouble. (If the specified expression is not a valid Double literal, the invocation of this method will not compile.)

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
implicit val ordering: Ordering[FiniteDouble]

Implicit Ordering instance.

Implicit Ordering instance.

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala
implicit def widenToDouble(pos: FiniteDouble): Double

Implicit widening conversion from FiniteDouble to Double.

Implicit widening conversion from FiniteDouble to Double.

Value parameters:
pos

the FiniteDouble to widen

Returns:

the Double value underlying the specified FiniteDouble

Source:
FiniteDouble.scala