Balanced Ternary is a Rust library for manipulating
balanced ternary
numbers, a numeral system with digits -1
, 0
, and +1
.
This system is particularly useful in specialized computing applications such as reversible computing, digital signal processing, and three-valued logic modeling.
- No Standard Library: Suitable for
#![no_std]
environments. - Number Conversions: Convert between decimal and balanced ternary representations.
- Arithmetic Operations: Support for addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and bit shifting (
<<
,>>
). - Three-value Logic Operations:
- Custom Representation: Parse and display numbers using
+
,0
, and-
symbols by default, or custom ones.
All features are enabled by default.
To enable only some features, use the default-features
option
in your dependency declaration:
[dependencies.balanced-ternary]
version = "*.*"
default-features = false
# Choose which one to enable
features = ["ternary-string", "tryte", "ternary-store"]
Without any feature, this library provide the type Digit
and all its operations and the trait DigitOperate
.
Add the structure Ternary
which is a vector of Digits
and a lot of utilities
to manipulate digits into the ternary number.
Implements DigitOperate
.
Needs the feature
ternary-string
.
Add the type Tryte<N>
which is a fixed size copy-type ternary number.
Implements DigitOperate
.
Needs the feature
ternary-string
.
Add structures to store ternaries efficiently. These types are provided:
DataTernary
: a variable length ternary number stored intoTritsChunk
s,TritsChunk
: a fixed size copy-type 5 digits stored into one byte,Ter40
: a fixed size copy-type 40 digits stored into one 64 bits integer. ImplementsDigitOperate
.
The library supports numerous three-valued logic operations, each of them having its own specificities:
- K3 (Kleene logic)
A three-valued logic that introduces an "unknown" (0) state, useful for dealing with partial information. - BI3 (Bochvar logic)
A logic designed to handle "nonsense" or meaningless statements, where 0 represents an invalid or undefined value. - L3 (Łukasiewicz logic)
A non-classical logic allowing for degrees of truth, often used in fuzzy logic and multi-valued reasoning. - RM3 (Routley-Meyer paraconsistent logic)
A logic that tolerates contradictions without collapsing into triviality, useful in paraconsistent reasoning. - HT (Heyting logic-inspired ternary system)
A variant of intermediate logic, often related to intuitionistic logic and constructive reasoning. - Paraconsistent logic
A logic framework that avoids the principle of explosion, allowing systems to work with contradictory information. - Post logic
A logical system that extends classical logic with additional operators to handle uncertainty in a structured way.
The library provides a variety of operations that can be performed on individual balanced ternary digits. These operations include logical operations, arithmetic operations, and utility functions that are useful for manipulating ternary numbers at the digit level. Below are the truth table of these operations:
You can use these operations with the DigitOperate
trait methods,
each_*
(with
, zip
, zip_carry
):
#[cfg(feature = "ternary-string")]
fn test_each() {
use crate::*;
let ternary = Ternary::parse("+0-");
assert_eq!(ternary.each(Digit::possibly).to_string(), "++-");
}
use balanced_ternary::*;
fn test() {
let ternary = Ternary::from_dec(5);
assert_eq!(ternary.to_string(), "+--");
let ternary = Ternary::parse("+--");
assert_eq!(ternary.to_dec(), 5);
let ternary = "+-0".parse::<Ternary>().unwrap();
assert_eq!(ternary.to_string(), "+-0");
}
use balanced_ternary::*;
fn test() {
let a = Ternary::from_dec(9);
let b = Ternary::from_dec(4);
let sum = &a + &b;
assert_eq!(sum.to_string(), "+++");
assert_eq!(sum.to_dec(), 13);
let bitwise = &Ternary::parse("++00") & &Ternary::parse("0000");
assert_eq!(bitwise.to_string(), "0000");
let bitwise = &Ternary::parse("++00") & &Ternary::parse("0+00");
assert_eq!(bitwise.to_string(), "0+00");
let bitwise = &Ternary::parse("+000") | &Ternary::parse("000-");
assert_eq!(bitwise.to_string(), "+000");
let bitwise = &Ternary::parse("+000") & &Ternary::parse("000-");
assert_eq!(bitwise.to_string(), "000-");
let bitwise = &Ternary::parse("+000") | &Ternary::parse("000+");
assert_eq!(bitwise.to_string(), "+00+");
let shifted = &Ternary::parse("+0-") << 2;
assert_eq!(shifted.to_string(), "+0-00");
let back = &shifted >> 2;
assert_eq!(back.to_string(), "+0-");
}
use balanced_ternary::*;
fn test() {
let negative = Ternary::from_dec(-5);
assert_eq!(negative.to_string(), "-++");
}
use balanced_ternary::*;
fn test() {
let ternary = Ternary::parse("+0-");
// Using `.iter()`
let v: Vec<Digit> = ternary.iter().cloned().collect();
assert_eq!(v, vec![Pos, Zero, Neg]);
// Using `IntoIterator`
let v: Vec<Digit> = Ternary::parse("+0-").into_iter().collect();
assert_eq!(v, vec![Pos, Zero, Neg]);
}
The complete API documentation can be found on docs.rs. There you can find descriptions and examples of available types and methods.
Copyright (c) 2025 Sébastien GELDREICH
Balanced Ternary
is licensed under the MIT License.