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Rust crate to quantize numbers to a smaller range to save bandwidth or memory

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vilcans/numquant

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numquant

Quantize numbers to a smaller range to save bandwidth or memory.

The input floating point value is expected to be within a given range. Values outside this range will be clamped. The input value will then be quantized into a given integer range.

For example, given the allowed range -1000.0 to 1000.0, and the quantized range 0 to 255 (to fit in a byte), the value -1000.0 would be quantized to 0, and 1000.0 would be quantized to 255, and values in-between are linearly interpolated between 0 and 255.

Example

This example uses the type Q8<0, 1000> that converts any floating point number between 0.0 and 1000.0 to a byte (which has the range 0 to 255). Some precision is lost, but an approximate value can be brought back.

use numquant::Q8;
let original = 500.0;
// Quantize the value into a byte between 0 and 255.
// Quantization supports inputs between 0 and 1000.
type T = Q8::<0, 1000>;
let quantized = T::from_f64(original);
// Convert it back to an f64
let dequantized = quantized.to_f64();
// The conversion isn't lossless, but the dequantized value is close to the original:
approx::assert_abs_diff_eq!(original, dequantized, epsilon = T::max_error());

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Rust crate to quantize numbers to a smaller range to save bandwidth or memory

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Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

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LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

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