Determine if an ndarray data type can be safely cast or, for floating-point data types, downcast to another ndarray data type.
Determine if an ndarray data type can be safely cast to another ndarray data type.
Determine if an ndarray data type can be safely cast to, or is of the same kind as, another ndarray data type.
Determine if an ndarray data type can be cast to another ndarray data type according to a specified casting mode.
Wrap a function and casts a function's return value to a complex number.
Return a list of ndarray data types to which a provided ndarray data type can be safely cast or cast within the same kind.
stand-alone library of threejs examples
Return a list of ndarray data types to which a provided ndarray data type can be safely cast.
Return a list of ndarray data types to which a provided ndarray data type can be safely cast and, for floating-point data types, can be downcast.
Test if a value is a boolean.
C APIs for registering a Node-API module exporting an interface for invoking a binary numerical function.
Test if a value is a Float64Array.
Test if a value is a Uint32Array.
Test if a value is a string.
Detect native Uint32Array support.
Test if a value is a Buffer object.
Double-precision complex number functions.
Return a normal number `y` and exponent `exp` satisfying `x = y * 2^exp`.
Smallest positive double-precision floating-point normal number.
Detect native Symbol support.
Single-precision complex number functions.
The bias of a double-precision floating-point number's exponent.
Test if a value is a function.
Escape a regular expression string or pattern.
Experimental: A curated library of reusable architectural concepts expressed in cast vocabulary. Downstream projects pull this in and reference its concepts via cast::continues_in! rather than re-deriving the same patterns inline.
Experimental: A curated library of reusable OS-level architectural concepts expressed in cast vocabulary. Downstream OS/kernel/cluster projects pull this in and reference its concepts via cast::continues_in! rather than re-deriving the same patterns inline.