| Type: | Package | 
| Title: | 'Rcpp' Bindings for the 'fast_float' Header-Only Library for Number Parsing | 
| Version: | 0.0.5 | 
| Date: | 2025-01-15 | 
| Description: | Converting ascii text into (floating-point) numeric values is a very common problem. The 'fast_float' header-only C++ library by Daniel Lemire does it very well and very fast at up to or over to 1 gigabyte per second as described in more detail in <doi:10.1002/spe.2984>. 'fast_float' is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license and provided here for use by other R packages via a simple 'LinkingTo:' statement. | 
| License: | GPL-2 | GPL-3 [expanded from: GPL (≥ 2)] | 
| Imports: | Rcpp | 
| LinkingTo: | Rcpp | 
| Suggests: | tinytest | 
| URL: | https://github.com/eddelbuettel/rcppfastfloat/, https://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/code/rcpp.fastfloat.html | 
| BugReports: | https://github.com/eddelbuettel/rcppfastfloat/issues | 
| RoxygenNote: | 6.0.1 | 
| Encoding: | UTF-8 | 
| NeedsCompilation: | yes | 
| Packaged: | 2025-01-15 13:13:47 UTC; edd | 
| Author: | Dirk Eddelbuettel | 
| Maintainer: | Dirk Eddelbuettel <edd@debian.org> | 
| Repository: | CRAN | 
| Date/Publication: | 2025-01-15 13:30:02 UTC | 
Ultra efficient string-to-double Conversion
Description
For character vectors, as.double2() is a
drop-in replacement for base::as.double().
Usage
as.double2(x)
Arguments
| x | A vector of type  | 
See Also
as.double()
Examples
set.seed(8675309)
input <- sample(c(
  paste0(" \r\n\t\f\v", c(0.0, sqrt(seq(1, 10))), " \r\n\t\f\v"),
  c("NaN", "-NaN", "nan", "-nan",
    "Inf", "-Inf", "inf", "-inf", "infinity", "-infinity",
    NA_character_,
    "  1970-01-01", "1970-01-02  ")
))
input
suppressWarnings(as.double2(input)) # NAs introduced by coercion
comparison <- suppressWarnings(
  matrix(c(as.double(input), as.double2(input)),
         ncol = 2L,
         dimnames = list(NULL, c("as.double()", "as.double2()")))
)
comparison
all.equal(comparison[, "as.double()"], comparison[, "as.double2()"])
Floating Point Parsing Example
Description
This example is adapted from the example of the upstream README.md file, and generalized to be called from R with variable input.
Usage
parseExample(input = "3.1416 xyz ", verbose = TRUE)
Arguments
| input | A character variable with text to parse including a simple default | 
| verbose | A boolean variable to show or suppress progress, defaults to true | 
Value
A floating point scalar is returned on success; in case of parsing failure
the function exists via stop().
Examples
parseExample()