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long double tgammal(long double x); /* C99 */ | long double tgammal(long double x); /* C99 */ | ||
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==General References== | |||
{{cite web |url =https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=C_Programming/Further_math&oldid=3676087 |title= C Programming/Further math. | author = Wikibooks contributors |website= Wikibooks |publisher= Wikibooks |access-date = 13 May 2024 }} | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 23:00, 13 May 2024
The <math.h>
header contains prototypes for several functions that deal with mathematics. In the 1990 version of the ISO standard, only the double
versions of the functions were specified; the 1999 version added the float
and long double
versions. To use these math functions, you must link your program with the math library. For some compilers (including GCC), you must specify the additional parameter -lm
[1][2].
The math functions may produce one of two kinds of errors. Domain errors occur when the parameters to the functions are invalid, such as a negative number as a parameter to sqrt (the square root function). Range errors occur when the result of the function cannot be expressed in that particular floating-point type, such as pow(1000.0, 1000.0) if the maximum value of a double is around 10308.
The functions can be grouped into the following categories:
Trigonometric functions
The acos
and asin
functions
The acos
functions return the arccosine of their arguments in radians, and the asin
functions return the arcsine of their arguments in radians. All functions expect the argument in the range [-1,+1]. The arccosine returns a value in the range [0,π]; the arcsine returns a value in the range [-π/2,+π/2].
#include <math.h>
float asinf(float x); /* C99 */
float acosf(float x); /* C99 */
double asin(double x);
double acos(double x);
long double asinl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double acosl(long double x); /* C99 */
The atan
and atan2
functions
The atan
functions return the arctangent of their arguments in radians, and the atan2
function return the arctangent of y/x
in radians. The atan
functions return a value in the range [-π/2,+π/2] (the reason why ±π/2 are included in the range is because the floating-point value may represent infinity, and atan(±∞) = ±π/2); the atan2
functions return a value in the range [-π,+π]. For atan2
, a domain error may occur if both arguments are zero.
#include <math.h>
float atanf(float x); /* C99 */
float atan2f(float y, float x); /* C99 */
double atan(double x);
double atan2(double y, double x);
long double atanl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double atan2l(long double y, long double x); /* C99 */
The cos
, sin
, and tan
functions
The cos
, sin
, and tan
functions return the cosine, sine, and tangent of the argument, expressed in radians.
#include <math.h>
float cosf(float x); /* C99 */
float sinf(float x); /* C99 */
float tanf(float x); /* C99 */
double cos(double x);
double sin(double x);
double tan(double x);
long double cosl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double sinl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double tanl(long double x); /* C99 */
Hyperbolic functions
The cosh, sinh and tanh functions compute the hyperbolic cosine, the hyperbolic sine, and the hyperbolic tangent of the argument respectively. For the hyperbolic sine and cosine functions, a range error occurs if the magnitude of the argument is too large.
The acosh functions compute the inverse hyperbolic cosine of the argument. A domain error occurs for arguments less than 1.
The asinh functions compute the inverse hyperbolic sine of the argument.
The atanh functions compute the inverse hyperbolic tangent of the argument. A domain error occurs if the argument is not in the interval [-1, +1]. A range error may occur if the argument equals -1 or +1.
#include <math.h>
float coshf(float x); /* C99 */
float sinhf(float x); /* C99 */
float tanhf(float x); /* C99 */
double cosh(double x);
double sinh(double x);
double tanh(double x);
long double coshl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double sinhl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double tanhl(long double x); /* C99 */
float acoshf(float x); /* C99 */
float asinhf(float x); /* C99 */
float atanhf(float x); /* C99 */
double acosh(double x); /* C99 */
double asinh(double x); /* C99 */
double atanh(double x); /* C99 */
long double acoshl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double asinhl(long double x); /* C99 */
long double atanhl(long double x); /* C99 */
Exponential and logarithmic functions
The exp
, exp2
, and expm1
functions
The exp
functions compute the base-e exponential function of x
(ex). A range error occurs if the magnitude of x
is too large.
The exp2
functions compute the base-2 exponential function of x
(2x). A range error occurs if the magnitude of x
is too large.
The expm1
functions compute the base-e exponential function of the argument, minus 1. A range error occurs if the magnitude of x
is too large.
#include <math.h>
float expf(float x); /* C99 */
double exp(double x);
long double expl(long double x); /* C99 */
float exp2f(float x); /* C99 */
double exp2(double x); /* C99 */
long double exp2l(long double x); /* C99 */
float expm1f(float x); /* C99 */
double expm1(double x); /* C99 */
long double expm1l(long double x); /* C99 */
The frexp
, ldexp
, modf
, scalbn
, and scalbln
functions
These functions are heavily used in software floating-point emulators, but are otherwise rarely directly called.
Inside the computer, each floating point number is represented by two parts:
- The significand is either in the range [1/2, 1), or it equals zero.
- The exponent is an integer.
The value of a floating point number [math]v[/math] is [math]v = {\rm significand} \times 2^{\rm exponent}[/math].
The frexp
functions break the argument floating point number value
into those two parts, the exponent and significand.
After breaking it apart, it stores the exponent in the int
object pointed to by ex
, and returns the significand.
In other words, the value returned is a copy of the given floating point number but with an exponent replaced by 0.
If value
is zero, both parts of the result are zero.
The ldexp
functions multiply a floating-point number by a integral power of 2 and return the result.
In other words, it returns copy of the given floating point number with the exponent increased by ex.
A range error may occur.
The modf
functions break the argument value
into integer and fraction parts, each of which has the same sign as the argument. They store the integer part in the object pointed to by *iptr
and return the fraction part.
The *iptr
is a floating-point type, rather than an "int" type, because it might be used to store an integer like 1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 which is too big to fit in an int.
The scalbn
and scalbln
compute x
× FLT_RADIXn
. FLT_RADIX
is the base of the floating-point system; if it is 2, the functions are equivalent to ldexp
.
#include <math.h>
float frexpf(float value, int *ex); /* C99 */
double frexp(double value, int *ex);
long double frexpl(long double value, int *ex); /* C99 */
float ldexpf(float x, int ex); /* C99 */
double ldexp(double x, int ex);
long double ldexpl(long double x, int ex); /* C99 */
float modff(float value, float *iptr); /* C99 */
double modf(double value, double *iptr);
long double modfl(long double value, long double *iptr); /* C99 */
float scalbnf(float x, int ex); /* C99 */
double scalbn(double x, int ex); /* C99 */
long double scalbnl(long double x, int ex); /* C99 */
float scalblnf(float x, long int ex); /* C99 */
double scalbln(double x, long int ex); /* C99 */
long double scalblnl(long double x, long int ex); /* C99 */
Most C floating point libraries also implement the IEEE754-recommended nextafter(), nextUp( ), and nextDown( ) functions. [3]
The log
, log2
, log1p
, and log10
functions
The log
functions compute the base-e natural logarithm of the argument and return the result. A domain error occurs if the argument is negative. A range error may occur if the argument is zero.
The log1p
functions compute the base-e natural logarithm of one plus the argument and return the result. A domain error occurs if the argument is less than -1. A range error may occur if the argument is -1.
The log10
functions compute the common (base-10) logarithm of the argument and return the result. A domain error occurs if the argument is negative. A range error may occur if the argument is zero.
The log2
functions compute the base-2 logarithm of the argument and return the result. A domain error occurs if the argument is negative. A range error may occur if the argument is zero.
#include <math.h>
float logf(float x); /* C99 */
double log(double x);
long double logl(long double x); /* C99 */
float log1pf(float x); /* C99 */
double log1p(double x); /* C99 */
long double log1pl(long double x); /* C99 */
float log10f(float x); /* C99 */
double log10(double x);
long double log10l(long double x); /* C99 */
float log2f(float x); /* C99 */
double log2(double x); /* C99 */
long double log2l(long double x); /* C99 */
The ilogb
and logb
functions
The ilogb
functions extract the exponent of x
as a signed int value. If x
is zero, they return the value FP_ILOGB0
; if x
is infinite, they return the value INT_MAX
; if x
is not-a-number they return the value FP_ILOGBNAN
; otherwise, they are equivalent to calling the corresponding logb
function and casting the returned value to type int
. A range error may occur if x
is zero. FP_ILOGB0
and FP_ILOGBNAN
are macros defined in math.h
; INT_MAX
is a macro defined in limits.h
.
The logb
functions extract the exponent of x
as a signed integer value in floating-point format. If x
is subnormal, it is treated as if it were normalized; thus, for positive finite x
, 1 ≤ x
× FLT_RADIX-logb(x)
< FLT_RADIX
. FLT_RADIX
is the radix for floating-point numbers, defined in the float.h
header.
#include <math.h>
int ilogbf(float x); /* C99 */
int ilogb(double x); /* C99 */
int ilogbl(long double x); /* C99 */
float logbf(float x); /* C99 */
double logb(double x); /* C99 */
long double logbl(long double x); /* C99 */
Power functions
The pow
functions
The pow
functions compute x
raised to the power y
and return the result. A domain error occurs if x
is negative and y
is not an integral value. A domain error occurs if the result cannot be represented when x
is zero and y
is less than or equal to zero. A range error may occur.
#include <math.h>
float powf(float x, float y); /* C99 */
double pow(double x, double y);
long double powl(long double x, long double y); /* C99 */
The sqrt
functions
The sqrt
functions compute the positive square root of x
and return the result. A domain error occurs if the argument is negative.
#include <math.h>
float sqrtf(float x); /* C99 */
double sqrt(double x);
long double sqrtl(long double x); /* C99 */
The cbrt
functions
The cbrt
functions compute the cube root of x
and return the result.
#include <math.h>
float cbrtf(float x); /* C99 */
double cbrt(double x); /* C99 */
long double cbrtl(long double x); /* C99 */
The hypot
functions
The hypot
functions compute the square root of the sums of the squares of x
and y
, without overflow or underflow, and return the result.
#include <math.h>
float hypotf(float x, float y); /* C99 */
double hypot(double x, double y); /* C99 */
long double hypotl(long double x, long double y); /* C99 */
Nearest integer, absolute value, and remainder functions
The ceil
and floor
functions
The ceil
functions compute the smallest integral value not less than x
and return the result; the floor
functions compute the largest integral value not greater than x
and return the result.
#include <math.h>
float ceilf(float x); /* C99 */
double ceil(double x);
long double ceill(long double x); /* C99 */
float floorf(float x); /* C99 */
double floor(double x);
long double floorl(long double x); /* C99 */
The fabs
functions
The fabs
functions compute the absolute value of a floating-point number x
and return the result.
#include <math.h>
float fabsf(float x); /* C99 */
double fabs(double x);
long double fabsl(long double x); /* C99 */
The fmod
functions
The fmod
functions compute the floating-point remainder of x/y
and return the value x
- i * y
, for some integer i such that, if y
is nonzero, the result has the same sign as x
and magnitude less than the magnitude of y
. If y
is zero, whether a domain error occurs or the fmod
functions return zero is implementation-defined.
#include <math.h>
float fmodf(float x, float y); /* C99 */
double fmod(double x, double y);
long double fmodl(long double x, long double y); /* C99 */
The nearbyint
, rint
, lrint
, and llrint
functions
The nearbyint
functions round their argument to an integer value in floating-point format, using the current rounding direction and without raising the "inexact" floating-point exception.
The rint
functions are similar to the nearbyint
functions except that they can raise the "inexact" floating-point exception if the result differs in value from the argument.
The lrint
and llrint
functions round their arguments to the nearest integer value according to the current rounding direction. If the result is outside the range of values of the return type, the numeric result is undefined and a range error may occur if the magnitude of the argument is too large.
#include <math.h>
float nearbyintf(float x); /* C99 */
double nearbyint(double x); /* C99 */
long double nearbyintl(long double x); /* C99 */
float rintf(float x); /* C99 */
double rint(double x); /* C99 */
long double rintl(long double x); /* C99 */
long int lrintf(float x); /* C99 */
long int lrint(double x); /* C99 */
long int lrintl(long double x); /* C99 */
long long int llrintf(float x); /* C99 */
long long int llrint(double x); /* C99 */
long long int llrintl(long double x); /* C99 */
The round
, lround
, and llround
functions
The round
functions round the argument to the nearest integer value in floating-point format, rounding halfway cases away from zero, regardless of the current rounding direction.
The lround
and llround
functions round the argument to the nearest integer value, rounding halfway cases away from zero, regardless of the current rounding direction. If the result is outside the range of values of the return type, the numeric result is undefined and a range error may occur if the magnitude of the argument is too large.
#include <math.h>
float roundf(float x); /* C99 */
double round(double x); /* C99 */
long double roundl(long double x); /* C99 */
long int lroundf(float x); /* C99 */
long int lround(double x); /* C99 */
long int lroundl(long double x); /* C99 */
long long int llroundf(float x); /* C99 */
long long int llround(double x); /* C99 */
long long int llroundl(long double x); /* C99 */
The trunc
functions
The trunc
functions round their argument to the integer value in floating-point format that is nearest but no larger in magnitude than the argument.
#include <math.h>
float truncf(float x); /* C99 */
double trunc(double x); /* C99 */
long double truncl(long double x); /* C99 */
The remainder
functions
The remainder
functions compute the remainder x
REM y
as defined by IEC 60559. The definition reads, "When y ≠ 0, the remainder r = x REM y is defined regardless of the rounding mode by the mathematical reduction r = x - ny, where n is the integer nearest the exact value of x/y; whenever |n - x/y| = ½, then n is even. Thus, the remainder is always exact. If r = 0, its sign shall be that of x." This definition is applicable for all implementations.
#include <math.h>
float remainderf(float x, float y); /* C99 */
double remainder(double x, double y); /* C99 */
long double remainderl(long double x, long double y); /* C99 */
The remquo
functions
The remquo
functions return the same remainder as the remainder
functions. In the object pointed to by quo
, they store a value whose sign is the sign of x
/y
and whose magnitude is congruent modulo 2n to the magnitude of the integral quotient of x
/y
, where n is an implementation-defined integer greater than or equal to 3.
#include <math.h>
float remquof(float x, float y, int *quo); /* C99 */
double remquo(double x, double y, int *quo); /* C99 */
long double remquol(long double x, long double y, int *quo); /* C99 */
Error and gamma functions
The erf
functions compute the error function of the argument [math]\frac{2}{\sqrt{\pi}}\int_{0}^x e^{-t^2}\,\mathrm dt[/math]
The erfc
functions compute the complimentary error function of the argument (that is, 1 - erf x). For the erfc
functions, a range error may occur if the argument is too large.
The lgamma
functions compute the natural logarithm of the absolute value of the gamma of the argument (that is, loge|Γ(x)|). A range error may occur if the argument is a negative integer or zero.
The tgamma
functions compute the gamma of the argument (that is, Γ(x)). A domain error occurs if the argument is a negative integer or if the result cannot be represented when the argument is zero. A range error may occur.
#include <math.h>
float erff(float x); /* C99 */
double erf(double x); /* C99 */
long double erfl(long double x); /* C99 */
float erfcf(float x); /* C99 */
double erfc(double x); /* C99 */
long double erfcl(long double x); /* C99 */
float lgammaf(float x); /* C99 */
double lgamma(double x); /* C99 */
long double lgammal(long double x); /* C99 */
float tgammaf(float x); /* C99 */
double tgamma(double x); /* C99 */
long double tgammal(long double x); /* C99 */
General References
Wikibooks contributors. "C Programming/Further math". Wikibooks. Wikibooks. Retrieved 13 May 2024.