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232 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
232 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
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[template policy_overview[]
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Policies are a powerful fine-grain mechanism that allow you to customise the
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behaviour of this library according to your needs. There is more information
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available in the [link math_toolkit.pol_tutorial policy tutorial]
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and the [link math_toolkit.pol_ref policy reference].
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Generally speaking, unless you find that the
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[link math_toolkit.pol_tutorial.policy_tut_defaults
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default policy behaviour]
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when encountering 'bad' argument values does not meet your needs,
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you should not need to worry about policies.
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Policies are a compile-time mechanism that allow you to change
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error-handling or calculation precision either
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program wide, or at the call site.
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Although the policy mechanism itself is rather complicated,
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in practice it is easy to use, and very flexible.
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Using policies you can control:
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* [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.error_handling_policies How results from 'bad' arguments are handled],
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including those that cannot be fully evaluated.
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* How [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.internal_promotion accuracy is controlled by internal promotion] to use more precise types.
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* What working [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.precision_pol precision] should be used to calculate results.
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* What to do when a [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.assert_undefined mathematically undefined function]
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is used: Should this raise a run-time or compile-time error?
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* Whether [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.discrete_quant_ref discrete functions],
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like the binomial, should return real or only integral values, and how they are rounded.
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* How many iterations a special function is permitted to perform in
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a series evaluation or root finding algorithm before it gives up and raises an
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__evaluation_error.
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You can control policies:
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* Using [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.policy_defaults macros] to
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change any default policy: the is the preferred method for installation
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wide policies.
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* At your chosen [link math_toolkit.pol_ref.namespace_pol
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namespace scope] for distributions and/or functions: this is the
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preferred method for project, namespace, or translation unit scope
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policies.
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* In an ad-hoc manner [link math_toolkit.pol_tutorial.ad_hoc_sf_policies
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by passing a specific policy to a special function], or to a
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[link math_toolkit.pol_tutorial.ad_hoc_dist_policies
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statistical distribution].
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]
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[template performance_overview[]
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By and large the performance of this library should be acceptable
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for most needs. However, often the library has to make a choice whether to
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be accurate or fast and by default it chooses accuracy over speed. If
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you would rather have fast rather than fully accurate routines, then
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refer to the [link perf performance section] for information and examples on how to
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achieve this.
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In terms of the algorithms used, this library aims to use the same "best
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of breed" algorithms as many other libraries: the principle difference
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is that this library is implemented in C++ - taking advantage of all
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the abstraction mechanisms that C++ offers - where as most traditional
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numeric libraries are implemented in C or FORTRAN. Traditionally
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languages such as C or FORTRAN are perceived as easier to optimise
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than more complex languages like C++, so in a sense this library
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provides a good test of current compiler technology, and the
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"abstraction penalty" - if any - of C++ compared to other languages.
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The three most important things you can do to ensure the best performance
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from this library are:
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# Turn on your compilers optimisations: the difference between "release"
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and "debug" builds can easily be a [link math_toolkit.getting_best factor of 20].
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# Pick your compiler carefully: [link math_toolkit.comp_compilers
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performance differences of up to
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8 fold] have been found between some Windows compilers for example.
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# Disable internal use of `long double`, this will reduce accuracy but
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typically yield a 2x speedup on modern x64 hardware/compilers.
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The [link perf performance section] contains more
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information on the performance
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of this library, what you can do to fine tune it, and how this library
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compares to some other open source alternatives.
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]
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[template compilers_overview[]
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This section contains some information about how various compilers
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work with this library.
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It is not comprehensive and updated experiences are always welcome.
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Some effort has been made to suppress unhelpful warnings but it is
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difficult to achieve this on all systems.
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[table Supported/Tested Compilers
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[[Platform][Compiler][Has long double support][Notes]]
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[[Windows][MSVC 7.1 and later][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free at level 4 with
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this compiler.]]
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[[Windows][Intel 8.1 and later][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free at level 4 with
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this compiler. However, The tests cases tend to generate a lot of
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warnings relating to numeric underflow of the test data: these are
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harmless.]]
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[[Windows][GNU Mingw32 C++][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.]]
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[[Windows][GNU Cygwin C++][No]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.
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Long double support has been disabled because there are no native
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long double C std library functions available.]]
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[[Windows][Borland C++ 5.8.2 (Developer studio 2006)][No]
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[We have only partial compatibility with this compiler:
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Long double support has been disabled because the native
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long double C standard library functions really only forward to the
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double versions. This can result in unpredictable behaviour when
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using the long double overloads: for example `sqrtl` applied to a
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finite value, can result in an infinite result.
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Some functions still fail to compile, there are no known workarounds at present.]]
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[[Windows 7/Netbeans 7.2][Clang 3.1][Yes][Spot examples OK. Expect all tests to compile and run OK.]]
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[[Linux][GNU C++ 3.4 and later][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.]]
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[[Linux][Clang 3.2][Yes][All tests OK.]]
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[[Linux][Intel C++ 10.0 and later][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.
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However, The tests cases tend to generate a lot of
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warnings relating to numeric underflow of the test data: these are
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harmless.]]
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[[Linux][Intel C++ 8.1 and 9.1][No]
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[All tests OK.
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Long double support has been disabled with these compiler releases
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because calling the standard library long double math functions
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can result in a segfault. The issue is Linux distribution and
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glibc version specific and is Intel bug report #409291. Fully up to date
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releases of Intel 9.1 (post version l_cc_c_9.1.046)
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shouldn't have this problem. If you need long
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double support with this compiler, then comment out the define of
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BOOST_MATH_NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH_FUNCTIONS at line 55 of
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[@../../../../boost/math/tools/config.hpp boost/math/tools/config.hpp].
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.
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However, The tests cases tend to generate a lot of
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warnings relating to numeric underflow of the test data: these are
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harmless.]]
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[[Linux][QLogic PathScale 3.0][Yes]
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[Some tests involving conceptual checks fail to build, otherwise
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there appear to be no issues.]]
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[[Linux][Sun Studio 12][Yes]
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[Some tests involving function overload resolution fail to build,
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these issues should be rarely encountered in practice.]]
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[[Solaris][Sun Studio 12][Yes]
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[Some tests involving function overload resolution fail to build,
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these issues should be rarely encountered in practice.]]
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[[Solaris][GNU C++ 4.x][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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We aim to keep our headers warning free with -Wall with this compiler.]]
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[[HP Tru64][Compaq C++ 7.1][Yes]
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[All tests OK.]]
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[[HP-UX Itanium][HP aCC 6.x][Yes]
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[All tests OK.
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Unfortunately this compiler emits quite a few warnings from libraries
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upon which we depend (TR1, Array etc).]]
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[[HP-UX PA-RISC][GNU C++ 3.4][No]
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[All tests OK.]]
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[[Apple Mac OS X, Intel][Darwin/GNU C++ 4.x][Yes][All tests OK.]]
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[[Apple Mac OS X, PowerPC][Darwin/GNU C++ 4.x][No]
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[All tests OK.
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Long double support has been disabled on this platform due to the
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rather strange nature of Darwin's 106-bit long double
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implementation. It should be possible to make this work if someone
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is prepared to offer assistance.]]
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[[Apple Mac OS X,][Clang 3.2][Yes][All tests expected to be OK.]]
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[[IBM AIX][IBM xlc 5.3][Yes]
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[All tests pass except for our fpclassify tests which fail due to a
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bug in `std::numeric_limits`, the bug effects the test code, not
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fpclassify itself. The IBM compiler group are aware of the problem.]]
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]
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[table Unsupported Compilers
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[[Platform][Compiler]]
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[[Windows][Borland C++ 5.9.2 (Borland Developer Studio 2007)]]
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[[Windows][MSVC 6 and 7]]
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]
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If your compiler or platform is not listed above, please try running the
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regression tests: cd into boost-root/libs/math/test and do a:
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bjam mytoolset
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where "mytoolset" is the name of the
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[@http://www.boost.org/doc/html/bbv2.html Boost.Build]
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toolset used for your
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compiler. The chances are that [*many of the accuracy tests will fail
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at this stage] - don't panic - the default acceptable error tolerances
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are quite tight, especially for long double types with an extended
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exponent range (these cause more extreme test cases to be executed
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for some functions).
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You will need to cast an eye over the output from
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the failing tests and make a judgement as to whether
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the error rates are acceptable or not.
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]
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[/ common_overviews.qbk
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Copyright 2007, 2012, 2014 John Maddock and Paul A. Bristow.
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Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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(See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
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http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
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]
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