I need to evaluate the sum of the row: 1/1+1/2+1/3+...+1/n. Considering that in C++ evaluations are not complete accurate, the order of summation plays important role. 1/n+1/(n-1)+...+1/2+1/1 expression gives the more accurate result. So I need to find out the order of summation, which provides the maximum accuracy. I don't even know where to begin. Preferred language of realization is C++. Sorry for my English, if there are any mistakes.
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Actually, if you're doing the summation for large N, adding in order from smallest to largest is not the best way -- you can still get into a situation where the numbers you're adding are too small relative to the sum to produce an accurate result. Look at the problem this way: You have N summations, regardless of ordering, and you wish to have the least total error. Thus, you should be able to get the least total error by minimizing the error of each summation -- and you minimize the error in a summation by adding values as nearly close to each other as possible. I believe that following that chain of logic gives you a binary tree of partial sums:
and so on until you get to a single answer. Of course, when N is not a power of two, you'll end up with leftovers at each stage, which you need to carry over into the summations at the next stage. (The margins of StackOverflow are of course too small to include a proof that this is optimal. In part because I haven't taken the time to prove it. But it does work for any N, however large, as all of the additions are adding values of nearly identical magnitude. Well, all but log(N) of them in the worst not-power-of-2 case, and that's vanishingly small compared to N.) |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrary-precision_arithmetic You can find libraries with ready for use implementation for C/C++. For example http://www.apfloat.org/apfloat/ |
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I'm not sure about the order of summation playing an important role, I havent heard that before. I guess you want to do this in floating point arithmetic so the first thing is to think more inline of (1.0/1.0 + 1.0/2.0+1.0/3.0) - otherwise the compiler will do integer division to determine order of evaluation, maybe a for loop or brackets? e.g.
oh forgot to say, compilers will normally have switches to determine floating point evaluation mode. this is maybe related to what you say on order of summation - in visual C+ these are found in code-generation compile settings, in g++ there're options -float that handle this actually, the other guy is right - you should do summation in order of smallest component first; so 1/n + 1/(n-1) .. 1/1 this is because the precision of a floating point number is linked to the scale, if you start at 1 you'll have 23 bits of precision relative to 1.0. if you start at a smaller number the precision is relative to the smaller number, so you'll get 23 bits of precision relative to 1xe-200 or whatever. then as the number gets bigger rounding error will occur, but the overall error will be less than the other direction |
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The reason for the lack of accuracy is the precision of the float, double, and long double types. They only store so many "decimal" places. So adding a very small value to a large value has no effect, the small term is "lost" in the larger one. The series you're summing has a "long tail", in the sense that the small terms should add up to a large contribution. But if you sum in descending order, then after a while each new small term will have no effect (even before that, most of its decimal places will be discarded). Once you get to that point you can add a billion more terms, and if you do them one at a time it still has no effect. I think that summing in ascending order should give best accuracy for this kind of series, although it's possible there are some odd corner cases where errors due to rounding to powers of (1/2) might just so happen to give a closer answer for some addition orders than others. You probably can't really predict this, though. |
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For large n you'd better use asymptotic formulas, like the ones on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_number;
Another way is to use exp-log transformation. Basically: H_n = 1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... + 1/n = log(exp(1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... + 1/n)) = log(exp(1) * exp(1/2) * exp(1/3) * ... * exp(1/n)). Exponents and logarithms can be calculated pretty quickly and accuratelly by your standard library. Using multiplication you should get much more accurate results. If this is your homework and you are required to use simple addition, you'll better add from the smallest one to the largest one, as others suggested. |
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As all your numbers are rationals, the easiest (and also maybe the fastest, as it will have to do less floating point operations) would be to do the computations with rationals (tuples of 2 integers p,q), and then do just one floating point division at the end. update to use this technique effectively you will need to use bigints for p & q, as they grow quite fast... A fast prototype in Lisp, that has built in rationals shows:
So, the next better option could be to mantain the list of floating points and to reduce it summing the two smallest numbers in each step... |
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Here: What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic |
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Unless you use some accurate closed-form representation, a small-to-large ordered summation is likely to be most accurate simple solution (it's not clear to me why a log-exp would help - that's a neat trick, but you're not winning anything with it here, as far as I can tell). You can further gain precision by realizing that after a while, the sum will become "quantized": Effectively, when you have 2 digits of precision, adding 1.3 to 41 results in 42, not 42.3 - but you achieve almost a precision doubling by maintaining an "error" term. This is called Kahan Summation. You'd compute the error term (42-41-1.3 == -0.3) and correct that in the next addition by adding 0.3 to the next term before you add it in again. Kahan Summation in addition to a small-to-large ordering is liable to be as accurate as you'll ever need to get. I seriously doubt you'll ever need anything better for the harmonic series - after all, even after 2^45 iterations (crazy many) you'd still only be dealing with a numbers that are at least 1/2^45 large, and a sum that's on the order of 45 (<2^6), for an order of magnitude difference of 51 powers-of-two - i.e. even still representable in a double precision variable if you add in the "wrong" order. If you go small-to-large, and use Kahan Summation, the sun's probably going to extinguish before today's processors reach a percent of error - and you'll run into other tricky accuracy issues just due to the individual term error on that scale first anyhow (being that a number of the order of 2^53 or larger cannot be represented accurately as a double at all anyhow.) |
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