use iron_learn::Complex; use iron_learn::Tensor; #[test] fn test_complex_tensor_mul() { let a = Complex::new(1.0, 2.0); let b = Complex::new(3.0, 4.0); let c = Complex::new(5.0, 6.0); let d = Complex::new(7.0, 8.0); let m1 = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![a, b, c, d]).unwrap(); let m2 = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![a, c, b, d]).unwrap(); let result = (m1 * m2).unwrap(); let r1 = Complex::new(-10.0, 28.0); let r2 = Complex::new(-18.0, 68.0); let r3 = Complex::new(-18.0, 68.0); let r4 = Complex::new(-26.0, 172.0); let expected = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![r1, r2, r3, r4]).unwrap(); assert_eq!(expected, result); } #[test] fn test_complex_tensor_add() { let a = Complex::new(1.0, 2.0); let b = Complex::new(3.0, 4.0); let c = Complex::new(5.0, 6.0); let d = Complex::new(7.0, 8.0); let m1 = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![a, b, c, d]).unwrap(); let m2 = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![a, c, b, d]).unwrap(); let result = (m1 + m2).unwrap(); let r1 = Complex::new(2.0, 4.0); let r2 = Complex::new(8.0, 10.0); let r3 = Complex::new(8.0, 10.0); let r4 = Complex::new(14.0, 16.0); let expected = Tensor::new(vec![2, 2], vec![r1, r2, r3, r4]).unwrap(); assert_eq!(expected, result); }