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28f540f4 1@node Arithmetic, Date and Time, Mathematics, Top
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2@c %MENU% Low level arithmetic functions
3@chapter Arithmetic Functions
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4
5This chapter contains information about functions for doing basic
6arithmetic operations, such as splitting a float into its integer and
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7fractional parts or retrieving the imaginary part of a complex value.
8These functions are declared in the header files @file{math.h} and
9@file{complex.h}.
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10
11@menu
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12* Integers:: Basic integer types and concepts
13* Integer Division:: Integer division with guaranteed rounding.
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14* Floating Point Numbers:: Basic concepts. IEEE 754.
15* Floating Point Classes:: The five kinds of floating-point number.
16* Floating Point Errors:: When something goes wrong in a calculation.
17* Rounding:: Controlling how results are rounded.
18* Control Functions:: Saving and restoring the FPU's state.
19* Arithmetic Functions:: Fundamental operations provided by the library.
20* Complex Numbers:: The types. Writing complex constants.
21* Operations on Complex:: Projection, conjugation, decomposition.
7a68c94a 22* Parsing of Numbers:: Converting strings to numbers.
6962682f 23* Printing of Floats:: Converting floating-point numbers to strings.
7a68c94a 24* System V Number Conversion:: An archaic way to convert numbers to strings.
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25@end menu
26
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27@node Integers
28@section Integers
29@cindex integer
30
31The C language defines several integer data types: integer, short integer,
32long integer, and character, all in both signed and unsigned varieties.
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33The GNU C compiler extends the language to contain long long integers
34as well.
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35@cindex signedness
36
37The C integer types were intended to allow code to be portable among
38machines with different inherent data sizes (word sizes), so each type
39may have different ranges on different machines. The problem with
40this is that a program often needs to be written for a particular range
41of integers, and sometimes must be written for a particular size of
42storage, regardless of what machine the program runs on.
43
1f77f049 44To address this problem, @theglibc{} contains C type definitions
0e4ee106 45you can use to declare integers that meet your exact needs. Because the
1f77f049 46@glibcadj{} header files are customized to a specific machine, your
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47program source code doesn't have to be.
48
49These @code{typedef}s are in @file{stdint.h}.
50@pindex stdint.h
51
52If you require that an integer be represented in exactly N bits, use one
53of the following types, with the obvious mapping to bit size and signedness:
54
68979757 55@itemize @bullet
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56@item int8_t
57@item int16_t
58@item int32_t
59@item int64_t
60@item uint8_t
61@item uint16_t
62@item uint32_t
63@item uint64_t
64@end itemize
65
66If your C compiler and target machine do not allow integers of a certain
67size, the corresponding above type does not exist.
68
69If you don't need a specific storage size, but want the smallest data
70structure with @emph{at least} N bits, use one of these:
71
68979757 72@itemize @bullet
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73@item int_least8_t
74@item int_least16_t
75@item int_least32_t
76@item int_least64_t
77@item uint_least8_t
78@item uint_least16_t
79@item uint_least32_t
80@item uint_least64_t
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81@end itemize
82
e6e81391 83If you don't need a specific storage size, but want the data structure
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84that allows the fastest access while having at least N bits (and
85among data structures with the same access speed, the smallest one), use
86one of these:
87
68979757 88@itemize @bullet
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89@item int_fast8_t
90@item int_fast16_t
91@item int_fast32_t
92@item int_fast64_t
93@item uint_fast8_t
94@item uint_fast16_t
95@item uint_fast32_t
96@item uint_fast64_t
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97@end itemize
98
e6e81391 99If you want an integer with the widest range possible on the platform on
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100which it is being used, use one of the following. If you use these,
101you should write code that takes into account the variable size and range
102of the integer.
103
68979757 104@itemize @bullet
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105@item intmax_t
106@item uintmax_t
107@end itemize
108
1f77f049 109@Theglibc{} also provides macros that tell you the maximum and
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110minimum possible values for each integer data type. The macro names
111follow these examples: @code{INT32_MAX}, @code{UINT8_MAX},
112@code{INT_FAST32_MIN}, @code{INT_LEAST64_MIN}, @code{UINTMAX_MAX},
113@code{INTMAX_MAX}, @code{INTMAX_MIN}. Note that there are no macros for
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114unsigned integer minima. These are always zero. Similiarly, there
115are macros such as @code{INTMAX_WIDTH} for the width of these types.
116Those macros for integer type widths come from TS 18661-1:2014.
0e4ee106 117@cindex maximum possible integer
0bc93a2f 118@cindex minimum possible integer
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119
120There are similar macros for use with C's built in integer types which
121should come with your C compiler. These are described in @ref{Data Type
122Measurements}.
123
124Don't forget you can use the C @code{sizeof} function with any of these
125data types to get the number of bytes of storage each uses.
126
127
128@node Integer Division
129@section Integer Division
130@cindex integer division functions
131
132This section describes functions for performing integer division. These
133functions are redundant when GNU CC is used, because in GNU C the
134@samp{/} operator always rounds towards zero. But in other C
135implementations, @samp{/} may round differently with negative arguments.
136@code{div} and @code{ldiv} are useful because they specify how to round
137the quotient: towards zero. The remainder has the same sign as the
138numerator.
139
140These functions are specified to return a result @var{r} such that the value
141@code{@var{r}.quot*@var{denominator} + @var{r}.rem} equals
142@var{numerator}.
143
144@pindex stdlib.h
145To use these facilities, you should include the header file
146@file{stdlib.h} in your program.
147
0e4ee106 148@deftp {Data Type} div_t
d08a7e4c 149@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
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150This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the @code{div}
151function. It has the following members:
152
153@table @code
154@item int quot
155The quotient from the division.
156
157@item int rem
158The remainder from the division.
159@end table
160@end deftp
161
0e4ee106 162@deftypefun div_t div (int @var{numerator}, int @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 163@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
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164@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
165@c Functions in this section are pure, and thus safe.
e4fd1876 166The function @code{div} computes the quotient and remainder from
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167the division of @var{numerator} by @var{denominator}, returning the
168result in a structure of type @code{div_t}.
169
170If the result cannot be represented (as in a division by zero), the
171behavior is undefined.
172
173Here is an example, albeit not a very useful one.
174
175@smallexample
176div_t result;
177result = div (20, -6);
178@end smallexample
179
180@noindent
181Now @code{result.quot} is @code{-3} and @code{result.rem} is @code{2}.
182@end deftypefun
183
0e4ee106 184@deftp {Data Type} ldiv_t
d08a7e4c 185@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
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186This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the @code{ldiv}
187function. It has the following members:
188
189@table @code
190@item long int quot
191The quotient from the division.
192
193@item long int rem
194The remainder from the division.
195@end table
196
197(This is identical to @code{div_t} except that the components are of
198type @code{long int} rather than @code{int}.)
199@end deftp
200
0e4ee106 201@deftypefun ldiv_t ldiv (long int @var{numerator}, long int @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 202@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 203@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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204The @code{ldiv} function is similar to @code{div}, except that the
205arguments are of type @code{long int} and the result is returned as a
206structure of type @code{ldiv_t}.
207@end deftypefun
208
0e4ee106 209@deftp {Data Type} lldiv_t
d08a7e4c 210@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
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211This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the @code{lldiv}
212function. It has the following members:
213
214@table @code
215@item long long int quot
216The quotient from the division.
217
218@item long long int rem
219The remainder from the division.
220@end table
221
222(This is identical to @code{div_t} except that the components are of
223type @code{long long int} rather than @code{int}.)
224@end deftp
225
0e4ee106 226@deftypefun lldiv_t lldiv (long long int @var{numerator}, long long int @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 227@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 228@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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229The @code{lldiv} function is like the @code{div} function, but the
230arguments are of type @code{long long int} and the result is returned as
231a structure of type @code{lldiv_t}.
232
233The @code{lldiv} function was added in @w{ISO C99}.
234@end deftypefun
235
0e4ee106 236@deftp {Data Type} imaxdiv_t
d08a7e4c 237@standards{ISO, inttypes.h}
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238This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the @code{imaxdiv}
239function. It has the following members:
240
241@table @code
242@item intmax_t quot
243The quotient from the division.
244
245@item intmax_t rem
246The remainder from the division.
247@end table
248
249(This is identical to @code{div_t} except that the components are of
250type @code{intmax_t} rather than @code{int}.)
251
252See @ref{Integers} for a description of the @code{intmax_t} type.
253
254@end deftp
255
0e4ee106 256@deftypefun imaxdiv_t imaxdiv (intmax_t @var{numerator}, intmax_t @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 257@standards{ISO, inttypes.h}
b719dafd 258@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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259The @code{imaxdiv} function is like the @code{div} function, but the
260arguments are of type @code{intmax_t} and the result is returned as
261a structure of type @code{imaxdiv_t}.
262
263See @ref{Integers} for a description of the @code{intmax_t} type.
264
265The @code{imaxdiv} function was added in @w{ISO C99}.
266@end deftypefun
267
268
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269@node Floating Point Numbers
270@section Floating Point Numbers
271@cindex floating point
272@cindex IEEE 754
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273@cindex IEEE floating point
274
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275Most computer hardware has support for two different kinds of numbers:
276integers (@math{@dots{}-3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3@dots{}}) and
277floating-point numbers. Floating-point numbers have three parts: the
278@dfn{mantissa}, the @dfn{exponent}, and the @dfn{sign bit}. The real
279number represented by a floating-point value is given by
280@tex
281$(s \mathrel? -1 \mathrel: 1) \cdot 2^e \cdot M$
282@end tex
283@ifnottex
284@math{(s ? -1 : 1) @mul{} 2^e @mul{} M}
285@end ifnottex
286where @math{s} is the sign bit, @math{e} the exponent, and @math{M}
287the mantissa. @xref{Floating Point Concepts}, for details. (It is
288possible to have a different @dfn{base} for the exponent, but all modern
289hardware uses @math{2}.)
290
291Floating-point numbers can represent a finite subset of the real
292numbers. While this subset is large enough for most purposes, it is
293important to remember that the only reals that can be represented
294exactly are rational numbers that have a terminating binary expansion
295shorter than the width of the mantissa. Even simple fractions such as
296@math{1/5} can only be approximated by floating point.
297
298Mathematical operations and functions frequently need to produce values
299that are not representable. Often these values can be approximated
300closely enough for practical purposes, but sometimes they can't.
301Historically there was no way to tell when the results of a calculation
302were inaccurate. Modern computers implement the @w{IEEE 754} standard
303for numerical computations, which defines a framework for indicating to
304the program when the results of calculation are not trustworthy. This
305framework consists of a set of @dfn{exceptions} that indicate why a
306result could not be represented, and the special values @dfn{infinity}
307and @dfn{not a number} (NaN).
308
309@node Floating Point Classes
310@section Floating-Point Number Classification Functions
311@cindex floating-point classes
312@cindex classes, floating-point
313@pindex math.h
b4012b75 314
ec751a23 315@w{ISO C99} defines macros that let you determine what sort of
7a68c94a 316floating-point number a variable holds.
b4012b75 317
7a68c94a 318@deftypefn {Macro} int fpclassify (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 319@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 320@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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321This is a generic macro which works on all floating-point types and
322which returns a value of type @code{int}. The possible values are:
28f540f4 323
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324@vtable @code
325@item FP_NAN
1b009d5a 326@standards{C99, math.h}
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327The floating-point number @var{x} is ``Not a Number'' (@pxref{Infinity
328and NaN})
329@item FP_INFINITE
1b009d5a 330@standards{C99, math.h}
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331The value of @var{x} is either plus or minus infinity (@pxref{Infinity
332and NaN})
333@item FP_ZERO
1b009d5a 334@standards{C99, math.h}
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335The value of @var{x} is zero. In floating-point formats like @w{IEEE
336754}, where zero can be signed, this value is also returned if
337@var{x} is negative zero.
338@item FP_SUBNORMAL
1b009d5a 339@standards{C99, math.h}
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340Numbers whose absolute value is too small to be represented in the
341normal format are represented in an alternate, @dfn{denormalized} format
342(@pxref{Floating Point Concepts}). This format is less precise but can
343represent values closer to zero. @code{fpclassify} returns this value
344for values of @var{x} in this alternate format.
345@item FP_NORMAL
1b009d5a 346@standards{C99, math.h}
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347This value is returned for all other values of @var{x}. It indicates
348that there is nothing special about the number.
349@end vtable
28f540f4 350
7a68c94a 351@end deftypefn
28f540f4 352
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353@code{fpclassify} is most useful if more than one property of a number
354must be tested. There are more specific macros which only test one
355property at a time. Generally these macros execute faster than
356@code{fpclassify}, since there is special hardware support for them.
357You should therefore use the specific macros whenever possible.
28f540f4 358
29cb9293 359@deftypefn {Macro} int iscanonical (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 360@standards{ISO, math.h}
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361@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
362In some floating-point formats, some values have canonical (preferred)
363and noncanonical encodings (for IEEE interchange binary formats, all
364encodings are canonical). This macro returns a nonzero value if
365@var{x} has a canonical encoding. It is from TS 18661-1:2014.
366
367Note that some formats have multiple encodings of a value which are
368all equally canonical; @code{iscanonical} returns a nonzero value for
369all such encodings. Also, formats may have encodings that do not
370correspond to any valid value of the type. In ISO C terms these are
371@dfn{trap representations}; in @theglibc{}, @code{iscanonical} returns
372zero for such encodings.
373@end deftypefn
374
7a68c94a 375@deftypefn {Macro} int isfinite (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 376@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 377@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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378This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is finite: not plus or
379minus infinity, and not NaN. It is equivalent to
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380
381@smallexample
7a68c94a 382(fpclassify (x) != FP_NAN && fpclassify (x) != FP_INFINITE)
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383@end smallexample
384
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385@code{isfinite} is implemented as a macro which accepts any
386floating-point type.
387@end deftypefn
fe0ec73e 388
7a68c94a 389@deftypefn {Macro} int isnormal (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 390@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 391@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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392This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is finite and normalized.
393It is equivalent to
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394
395@smallexample
7a68c94a 396(fpclassify (x) == FP_NORMAL)
b4012b75 397@end smallexample
7a68c94a 398@end deftypefn
b4012b75 399
7a68c94a 400@deftypefn {Macro} int isnan (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 401@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 402@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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403This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is NaN. It is equivalent
404to
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405
406@smallexample
7a68c94a 407(fpclassify (x) == FP_NAN)
b4012b75 408@end smallexample
7a68c94a 409@end deftypefn
b4012b75 410
57267616 411@deftypefn {Macro} int issignaling (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 412@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 413@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
57267616 414This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is a signaling NaN
bf91be88 415(sNaN). It is from TS 18661-1:2014.
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416@end deftypefn
417
d942e95c 418@deftypefn {Macro} int issubnormal (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 419@standards{ISO, math.h}
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420@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
421This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is subnormal. It is
422from TS 18661-1:2014.
423@end deftypefn
424
bb8081f5 425@deftypefn {Macro} int iszero (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 426@standards{ISO, math.h}
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427@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
428This macro returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is zero. It is from TS
42918661-1:2014.
430@end deftypefn
431
7a68c94a 432Another set of floating-point classification functions was provided by
1f77f049 433BSD. @Theglibc{} also supports these functions; however, we
ec751a23 434recommend that you use the ISO C99 macros in new code. Those are standard
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435and will be available more widely. Also, since they are macros, you do
436not have to worry about the type of their argument.
28f540f4 437
28f540f4 438@deftypefun int isinf (double @var{x})
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439@deftypefunx int isinff (float @var{x})
440@deftypefunx int isinfl (long double @var{x})
d08a7e4c 441@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 442@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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443This function returns @code{-1} if @var{x} represents negative infinity,
444@code{1} if @var{x} represents positive infinity, and @code{0} otherwise.
445@end deftypefun
446
28f540f4 447@deftypefun int isnan (double @var{x})
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448@deftypefunx int isnanf (float @var{x})
449@deftypefunx int isnanl (long double @var{x})
d08a7e4c 450@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 451@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
28f540f4 452This function returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is a ``not a number''
7a68c94a 453value, and zero otherwise.
b9b49b44 454
48b22986 455@strong{NB:} The @code{isnan} macro defined by @w{ISO C99} overrides
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456the BSD function. This is normally not a problem, because the two
457routines behave identically. However, if you really need to get the BSD
458function for some reason, you can write
b9b49b44 459
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460@smallexample
461(isnan) (x)
462@end smallexample
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463@end deftypefun
464
28f540f4 465@deftypefun int finite (double @var{x})
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466@deftypefunx int finitef (float @var{x})
467@deftypefunx int finitel (long double @var{x})
d08a7e4c 468@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 469@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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470This function returns a nonzero value if @var{x} is neither infinite nor
471a ``not a number'' value, and zero otherwise.
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472@end deftypefun
473
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474@strong{Portability Note:} The functions listed in this section are BSD
475extensions.
476
b4012b75 477
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478@node Floating Point Errors
479@section Errors in Floating-Point Calculations
480
481@menu
482* FP Exceptions:: IEEE 754 math exceptions and how to detect them.
483* Infinity and NaN:: Special values returned by calculations.
484* Status bit operations:: Checking for exceptions after the fact.
485* Math Error Reporting:: How the math functions report errors.
486@end menu
487
488@node FP Exceptions
489@subsection FP Exceptions
490@cindex exception
491@cindex signal
492@cindex zero divide
493@cindex division by zero
494@cindex inexact exception
495@cindex invalid exception
496@cindex overflow exception
497@cindex underflow exception
498
499The @w{IEEE 754} standard defines five @dfn{exceptions} that can occur
500during a calculation. Each corresponds to a particular sort of error,
501such as overflow.
502
503When exceptions occur (when exceptions are @dfn{raised}, in the language
504of the standard), one of two things can happen. By default the
505exception is simply noted in the floating-point @dfn{status word}, and
506the program continues as if nothing had happened. The operation
507produces a default value, which depends on the exception (see the table
508below). Your program can check the status word to find out which
509exceptions happened.
510
511Alternatively, you can enable @dfn{traps} for exceptions. In that case,
512when an exception is raised, your program will receive the @code{SIGFPE}
513signal. The default action for this signal is to terminate the
8b7fb588 514program. @xref{Signal Handling}, for how you can change the effect of
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515the signal.
516
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517@noindent
518The exceptions defined in @w{IEEE 754} are:
519
520@table @samp
521@item Invalid Operation
522This exception is raised if the given operands are invalid for the
523operation to be performed. Examples are
524(see @w{IEEE 754}, @w{section 7}):
525@enumerate
526@item
527Addition or subtraction: @math{@infinity{} - @infinity{}}. (But
528@math{@infinity{} + @infinity{} = @infinity{}}).
529@item
530Multiplication: @math{0 @mul{} @infinity{}}.
531@item
532Division: @math{0/0} or @math{@infinity{}/@infinity{}}.
533@item
534Remainder: @math{x} REM @math{y}, where @math{y} is zero or @math{x} is
535infinite.
536@item
e4fd1876 537Square root if the operand is less than zero. More generally, any
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538mathematical function evaluated outside its domain produces this
539exception.
540@item
541Conversion of a floating-point number to an integer or decimal
542string, when the number cannot be represented in the target format (due
543to overflow, infinity, or NaN).
544@item
545Conversion of an unrecognizable input string.
546@item
547Comparison via predicates involving @math{<} or @math{>}, when one or
548other of the operands is NaN. You can prevent this exception by using
549the unordered comparison functions instead; see @ref{FP Comparison Functions}.
550@end enumerate
551
552If the exception does not trap, the result of the operation is NaN.
553
554@item Division by Zero
555This exception is raised when a finite nonzero number is divided
556by zero. If no trap occurs the result is either @math{+@infinity{}} or
557@math{-@infinity{}}, depending on the signs of the operands.
558
559@item Overflow
560This exception is raised whenever the result cannot be represented
561as a finite value in the precision format of the destination. If no trap
562occurs the result depends on the sign of the intermediate result and the
563current rounding mode (@w{IEEE 754}, @w{section 7.3}):
564@enumerate
565@item
566Round to nearest carries all overflows to @math{@infinity{}}
567with the sign of the intermediate result.
568@item
569Round toward @math{0} carries all overflows to the largest representable
570finite number with the sign of the intermediate result.
571@item
572Round toward @math{-@infinity{}} carries positive overflows to the
573largest representable finite number and negative overflows to
574@math{-@infinity{}}.
575
576@item
577Round toward @math{@infinity{}} carries negative overflows to the
578most negative representable finite number and positive overflows
579to @math{@infinity{}}.
580@end enumerate
581
582Whenever the overflow exception is raised, the inexact exception is also
583raised.
584
585@item Underflow
586The underflow exception is raised when an intermediate result is too
587small to be calculated accurately, or if the operation's result rounded
588to the destination precision is too small to be normalized.
589
590When no trap is installed for the underflow exception, underflow is
591signaled (via the underflow flag) only when both tininess and loss of
592accuracy have been detected. If no trap handler is installed the
593operation continues with an imprecise small value, or zero if the
594destination precision cannot hold the small exact result.
595
596@item Inexact
597This exception is signalled if a rounded result is not exact (such as
598when calculating the square root of two) or a result overflows without
599an overflow trap.
600@end table
601
602@node Infinity and NaN
603@subsection Infinity and NaN
604@cindex infinity
605@cindex not a number
606@cindex NaN
607
608@w{IEEE 754} floating point numbers can represent positive or negative
609infinity, and @dfn{NaN} (not a number). These three values arise from
610calculations whose result is undefined or cannot be represented
611accurately. You can also deliberately set a floating-point variable to
612any of them, which is sometimes useful. Some examples of calculations
613that produce infinity or NaN:
614
615@ifnottex
616@smallexample
617@math{1/0 = @infinity{}}
618@math{log (0) = -@infinity{}}
619@math{sqrt (-1) = NaN}
620@end smallexample
621@end ifnottex
622@tex
623$${1\over0} = \infty$$
624$$\log 0 = -\infty$$
625$$\sqrt{-1} = \hbox{NaN}$$
626@end tex
627
628When a calculation produces any of these values, an exception also
629occurs; see @ref{FP Exceptions}.
630
631The basic operations and math functions all accept infinity and NaN and
632produce sensible output. Infinities propagate through calculations as
633one would expect: for example, @math{2 + @infinity{} = @infinity{}},
634@math{4/@infinity{} = 0}, atan @math{(@infinity{}) = @pi{}/2}. NaN, on
635the other hand, infects any calculation that involves it. Unless the
636calculation would produce the same result no matter what real value
637replaced NaN, the result is NaN.
638
639In comparison operations, positive infinity is larger than all values
640except itself and NaN, and negative infinity is smaller than all values
641except itself and NaN. NaN is @dfn{unordered}: it is not equal to,
642greater than, or less than anything, @emph{including itself}. @code{x ==
643x} is false if the value of @code{x} is NaN. You can use this to test
644whether a value is NaN or not, but the recommended way to test for NaN
645is with the @code{isnan} function (@pxref{Floating Point Classes}). In
646addition, @code{<}, @code{>}, @code{<=}, and @code{>=} will raise an
647exception when applied to NaNs.
648
649@file{math.h} defines macros that allow you to explicitly set a variable
650to infinity or NaN.
b4012b75 651
7a68c94a 652@deftypevr Macro float INFINITY
d08a7e4c 653@standards{ISO, math.h}
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654An expression representing positive infinity. It is equal to the value
655produced by mathematical operations like @code{1.0 / 0.0}.
656@code{-INFINITY} represents negative infinity.
657
658You can test whether a floating-point value is infinite by comparing it
659to this macro. However, this is not recommended; you should use the
660@code{isfinite} macro instead. @xref{Floating Point Classes}.
661
ec751a23 662This macro was introduced in the @w{ISO C99} standard.
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663@end deftypevr
664
7a68c94a 665@deftypevr Macro float NAN
d08a7e4c 666@standards{GNU, math.h}
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667An expression representing a value which is ``not a number''. This
668macro is a GNU extension, available only on machines that support the
669``not a number'' value---that is to say, on all machines that support
670IEEE floating point.
671
672You can use @samp{#ifdef NAN} to test whether the machine supports
673NaN. (Of course, you must arrange for GNU extensions to be visible,
674such as by defining @code{_GNU_SOURCE}, and then you must include
675@file{math.h}.)
676@end deftypevr
677
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678@deftypevr Macro float SNANF
679@deftypevrx Macro double SNAN
680@deftypevrx Macro {long double} SNANL
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681@deftypevrx Macro _FloatN SNANFN
682@deftypevrx Macro _FloatNx SNANFNx
1b009d5a 683@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
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684@standardsx{SNANFN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
685@standardsx{SNANFNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
686These macros, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, are
687constant expressions for signaling NaNs.
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688@end deftypevr
689
c0b43536 690@deftypevr Macro int FE_SNANS_ALWAYS_SIGNAL
d08a7e4c 691@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
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692This macro, defined by TS 18661-1:2014, is defined to @code{1} in
693@file{fenv.h} to indicate that functions and operations with signaling
694NaN inputs and floating-point results always raise the invalid
695exception and return a quiet NaN, even in cases (such as @code{fmax},
696@code{hypot} and @code{pow}) where a quiet NaN input can produce a
697non-NaN result. Because some compiler optimizations may not handle
698signaling NaNs correctly, this macro is only defined if compiler
699support for signaling NaNs is enabled. That support can be enabled
700with the GCC option @option{-fsignaling-nans}.
701@end deftypevr
702
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703@w{IEEE 754} also allows for another unusual value: negative zero. This
704value is produced when you divide a positive number by negative
705infinity, or when a negative result is smaller than the limits of
cd837b09 706representation.
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707
708@node Status bit operations
709@subsection Examining the FPU status word
710
ec751a23 711@w{ISO C99} defines functions to query and manipulate the
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712floating-point status word. You can use these functions to check for
713untrapped exceptions when it's convenient, rather than worrying about
714them in the middle of a calculation.
715
716These constants represent the various @w{IEEE 754} exceptions. Not all
717FPUs report all the different exceptions. Each constant is defined if
718and only if the FPU you are compiling for supports that exception, so
719you can test for FPU support with @samp{#ifdef}. They are defined in
720@file{fenv.h}.
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721
722@vtable @code
7a68c94a 723@item FE_INEXACT
d08a7e4c 724@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 725 The inexact exception.
7a68c94a 726@item FE_DIVBYZERO
d08a7e4c 727@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 728 The divide by zero exception.
7a68c94a 729@item FE_UNDERFLOW
d08a7e4c 730@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 731 The underflow exception.
7a68c94a 732@item FE_OVERFLOW
d08a7e4c 733@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 734 The overflow exception.
7a68c94a 735@item FE_INVALID
d08a7e4c 736@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 737 The invalid exception.
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738@end vtable
739
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740The macro @code{FE_ALL_EXCEPT} is the bitwise OR of all exception macros
741which are supported by the FP implementation.
b4012b75 742
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743These functions allow you to clear exception flags, test for exceptions,
744and save and restore the set of exceptions flagged.
b4012b75 745
63ae7b63 746@deftypefun int feclearexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 747@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
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748@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{@assposix{}}@acsafe{@acsposix{}}}
749@c The other functions in this section that modify FP status register
750@c mostly do so with non-atomic load-modify-store sequences, but since
751@c the register is thread-specific, this should be fine, and safe for
752@c cancellation. As long as the FP environment is restored before the
753@c signal handler returns control to the interrupted thread (like any
754@c kernel should do), the functions are also safe for use in signal
755@c handlers.
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756This function clears all of the supported exception flags indicated by
757@var{excepts}.
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758
759The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
760non-zero value otherwise.
761@end deftypefun
762
63ae7b63 763@deftypefun int feraiseexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 764@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 765@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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766This function raises the supported exceptions indicated by
767@var{excepts}. If more than one exception bit in @var{excepts} is set
768the order in which the exceptions are raised is undefined except that
769overflow (@code{FE_OVERFLOW}) or underflow (@code{FE_UNDERFLOW}) are
770raised before inexact (@code{FE_INEXACT}). Whether for overflow or
771underflow the inexact exception is also raised is also implementation
772dependent.
773
774The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
775non-zero value otherwise.
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776@end deftypefun
777
5146356f 778@deftypefun int fesetexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 779@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
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780@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
781This function sets the supported exception flags indicated by
782@var{excepts}, like @code{feraiseexcept}, but without causing enabled
783traps to be taken. @code{fesetexcept} is from TS 18661-1:2014.
784
785The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
786non-zero value otherwise.
787@end deftypefun
788
7a68c94a 789@deftypefun int fetestexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 790@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 791@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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792Test whether the exception flags indicated by the parameter @var{except}
793are currently set. If any of them are, a nonzero value is returned
794which specifies which exceptions are set. Otherwise the result is zero.
795@end deftypefun
796
797To understand these functions, imagine that the status word is an
798integer variable named @var{status}. @code{feclearexcept} is then
799equivalent to @samp{status &= ~excepts} and @code{fetestexcept} is
800equivalent to @samp{(status & excepts)}. The actual implementation may
801be very different, of course.
802
803Exception flags are only cleared when the program explicitly requests it,
804by calling @code{feclearexcept}. If you want to check for exceptions
805from a set of calculations, you should clear all the flags first. Here
806is a simple example of the way to use @code{fetestexcept}:
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807
808@smallexample
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809@{
810 double f;
811 int raised;
812 feclearexcept (FE_ALL_EXCEPT);
813 f = compute ();
814 raised = fetestexcept (FE_OVERFLOW | FE_INVALID);
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815 if (raised & FE_OVERFLOW) @{ /* @dots{} */ @}
816 if (raised & FE_INVALID) @{ /* @dots{} */ @}
817 /* @dots{} */
7a68c94a 818@}
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819@end smallexample
820
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821You cannot explicitly set bits in the status word. You can, however,
822save the entire status word and restore it later. This is done with the
823following functions:
b4012b75 824
63ae7b63 825@deftypefun int fegetexceptflag (fexcept_t *@var{flagp}, int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 826@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 827@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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828This function stores in the variable pointed to by @var{flagp} an
829implementation-defined value representing the current setting of the
830exception flags indicated by @var{excepts}.
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831
832The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
833non-zero value otherwise.
7a68c94a 834@end deftypefun
b4012b75 835
9251c568 836@deftypefun int fesetexceptflag (const fexcept_t *@var{flagp}, int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 837@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 838@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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839This function restores the flags for the exceptions indicated by
840@var{excepts} to the values stored in the variable pointed to by
841@var{flagp}.
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842
843The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
844non-zero value otherwise.
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845@end deftypefun
846
847Note that the value stored in @code{fexcept_t} bears no resemblance to
848the bit mask returned by @code{fetestexcept}. The type may not even be
849an integer. Do not attempt to modify an @code{fexcept_t} variable.
850
780257d4 851@deftypefun int fetestexceptflag (const fexcept_t *@var{flagp}, int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 852@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
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853@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
854Test whether the exception flags indicated by the parameter
855@var{excepts} are set in the variable pointed to by @var{flagp}. If
856any of them are, a nonzero value is returned which specifies which
857exceptions are set. Otherwise the result is zero.
858@code{fetestexceptflag} is from TS 18661-1:2014.
859@end deftypefun
860
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861@node Math Error Reporting
862@subsection Error Reporting by Mathematical Functions
863@cindex errors, mathematical
864@cindex domain error
865@cindex range error
866
867Many of the math functions are defined only over a subset of the real or
868complex numbers. Even if they are mathematically defined, their result
869may be larger or smaller than the range representable by their return
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870type without loss of accuracy. These are known as @dfn{domain errors},
871@dfn{overflows}, and
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872@dfn{underflows}, respectively. Math functions do several things when
873one of these errors occurs. In this manual we will refer to the
874complete response as @dfn{signalling} a domain error, overflow, or
875underflow.
876
877When a math function suffers a domain error, it raises the invalid
878exception and returns NaN. It also sets @var{errno} to @code{EDOM};
879this is for compatibility with old systems that do not support @w{IEEE
880754} exception handling. Likewise, when overflow occurs, math
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881functions raise the overflow exception and, in the default rounding
882mode, return @math{@infinity{}} or @math{-@infinity{}} as appropriate
883(in other rounding modes, the largest finite value of the appropriate
884sign is returned when appropriate for that rounding mode). They also
885set @var{errno} to @code{ERANGE} if returning @math{@infinity{}} or
886@math{-@infinity{}}; @var{errno} may or may not be set to
887@code{ERANGE} when a finite value is returned on overflow. When
888underflow occurs, the underflow exception is raised, and zero
889(appropriately signed) or a subnormal value, as appropriate for the
890mathematical result of the function and the rounding mode, is
891returned. @var{errno} may be set to @code{ERANGE}, but this is not
892guaranteed; it is intended that @theglibc{} should set it when the
893underflow is to an appropriately signed zero, but not necessarily for
894other underflows.
7a68c94a 895
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896When a math function has an argument that is a signaling NaN,
897@theglibc{} does not consider this a domain error, so @code{errno} is
898unchanged, but the invalid exception is still raised (except for a few
899functions that are specified to handle signaling NaNs differently).
900
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901Some of the math functions are defined mathematically to result in a
902complex value over parts of their domains. The most familiar example of
903this is taking the square root of a negative number. The complex math
904functions, such as @code{csqrt}, will return the appropriate complex value
905in this case. The real-valued functions, such as @code{sqrt}, will
906signal a domain error.
907
908Some older hardware does not support infinities. On that hardware,
909overflows instead return a particular very large number (usually the
910largest representable number). @file{math.h} defines macros you can use
911to test for overflow on both old and new hardware.
b4012b75 912
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913@deftypevr Macro double HUGE_VAL
914@deftypevrx Macro float HUGE_VALF
915@deftypevrx Macro {long double} HUGE_VALL
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916@deftypevrx Macro _FloatN HUGE_VAL_FN
917@deftypevrx Macro _FloatNx HUGE_VAL_FNx
d08a7e4c 918@standards{ISO, math.h}
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919@standardsx{HUGE_VAL_FN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
920@standardsx{HUGE_VAL_FNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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921An expression representing a particular very large number. On machines
922that use @w{IEEE 754} floating point format, @code{HUGE_VAL} is infinity.
923On other machines, it's typically the largest positive number that can
924be represented.
925
926Mathematical functions return the appropriately typed version of
927@code{HUGE_VAL} or @code{@minus{}HUGE_VAL} when the result is too large
928to be represented.
929@end deftypevr
b4012b75 930
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931@node Rounding
932@section Rounding Modes
933
934Floating-point calculations are carried out internally with extra
935precision, and then rounded to fit into the destination type. This
936ensures that results are as precise as the input data. @w{IEEE 754}
937defines four possible rounding modes:
938
939@table @asis
940@item Round to nearest.
941This is the default mode. It should be used unless there is a specific
942need for one of the others. In this mode results are rounded to the
943nearest representable value. If the result is midway between two
944representable values, the even representable is chosen. @dfn{Even} here
945means the lowest-order bit is zero. This rounding mode prevents
946statistical bias and guarantees numeric stability: round-off errors in a
947lengthy calculation will remain smaller than half of @code{FLT_EPSILON}.
948
949@c @item Round toward @math{+@infinity{}}
950@item Round toward plus Infinity.
951All results are rounded to the smallest representable value
952which is greater than the result.
953
954@c @item Round toward @math{-@infinity{}}
955@item Round toward minus Infinity.
956All results are rounded to the largest representable value which is less
957than the result.
958
959@item Round toward zero.
960All results are rounded to the largest representable value whose
961magnitude is less than that of the result. In other words, if the
962result is negative it is rounded up; if it is positive, it is rounded
963down.
964@end table
b4012b75 965
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966@noindent
967@file{fenv.h} defines constants which you can use to refer to the
968various rounding modes. Each one will be defined if and only if the FPU
969supports the corresponding rounding mode.
b4012b75 970
2fe82ca6 971@vtable @code
7a68c94a 972@item FE_TONEAREST
d08a7e4c 973@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 974Round to nearest.
b4012b75 975
7a68c94a 976@item FE_UPWARD
d08a7e4c 977@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 978Round toward @math{+@infinity{}}.
b4012b75 979
7a68c94a 980@item FE_DOWNWARD
d08a7e4c 981@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 982Round toward @math{-@infinity{}}.
b4012b75 983
7a68c94a 984@item FE_TOWARDZERO
d08a7e4c 985@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
7a68c94a 986Round toward zero.
2fe82ca6 987@end vtable
b4012b75 988
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989Underflow is an unusual case. Normally, @w{IEEE 754} floating point
990numbers are always normalized (@pxref{Floating Point Concepts}).
991Numbers smaller than @math{2^r} (where @math{r} is the minimum exponent,
992@code{FLT_MIN_RADIX-1} for @var{float}) cannot be represented as
993normalized numbers. Rounding all such numbers to zero or @math{2^r}
994would cause some algorithms to fail at 0. Therefore, they are left in
995denormalized form. That produces loss of precision, since some bits of
996the mantissa are stolen to indicate the decimal point.
997
998If a result is too small to be represented as a denormalized number, it
999is rounded to zero. However, the sign of the result is preserved; if
1000the calculation was negative, the result is @dfn{negative zero}.
1001Negative zero can also result from some operations on infinity, such as
cd837b09 1002@math{4/-@infinity{}}.
7a68c94a 1003
e4fd1876 1004At any time, one of the above four rounding modes is selected. You can
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1005find out which one with this function:
1006
7a68c94a 1007@deftypefun int fegetround (void)
d08a7e4c 1008@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1009@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1010Returns the currently selected rounding mode, represented by one of the
1011values of the defined rounding mode macros.
1012@end deftypefun
b4012b75 1013
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1014@noindent
1015To change the rounding mode, use this function:
b4012b75 1016
7a68c94a 1017@deftypefun int fesetround (int @var{round})
d08a7e4c 1018@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1019@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1020Changes the currently selected rounding mode to @var{round}. If
1021@var{round} does not correspond to one of the supported rounding modes
d5655997 1022nothing is changed. @code{fesetround} returns zero if it changed the
e4fd1876 1023rounding mode, or a nonzero value if the mode is not supported.
7a68c94a 1024@end deftypefun
b4012b75 1025
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1026You should avoid changing the rounding mode if possible. It can be an
1027expensive operation; also, some hardware requires you to compile your
1028program differently for it to work. The resulting code may run slower.
1029See your compiler documentation for details.
1030@c This section used to claim that functions existed to round one number
1031@c in a specific fashion. I can't find any functions in the library
1032@c that do that. -zw
1033
1034@node Control Functions
1035@section Floating-Point Control Functions
1036
1037@w{IEEE 754} floating-point implementations allow the programmer to
1038decide whether traps will occur for each of the exceptions, by setting
1039bits in the @dfn{control word}. In C, traps result in the program
1040receiving the @code{SIGFPE} signal; see @ref{Signal Handling}.
1041
48b22986 1042@strong{NB:} @w{IEEE 754} says that trap handlers are given details of
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1043the exceptional situation, and can set the result value. C signals do
1044not provide any mechanism to pass this information back and forth.
1045Trapping exceptions in C is therefore not very useful.
1046
1047It is sometimes necessary to save the state of the floating-point unit
1048while you perform some calculation. The library provides functions
1049which save and restore the exception flags, the set of exceptions that
1050generate traps, and the rounding mode. This information is known as the
1051@dfn{floating-point environment}.
1052
1053The functions to save and restore the floating-point environment all use
1054a variable of type @code{fenv_t} to store information. This type is
1055defined in @file{fenv.h}. Its size and contents are
1056implementation-defined. You should not attempt to manipulate a variable
1057of this type directly.
1058
1059To save the state of the FPU, use one of these functions:
1060
63ae7b63 1061@deftypefun int fegetenv (fenv_t *@var{envp})
d08a7e4c 1062@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1063@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1064Store the floating-point environment in the variable pointed to by
1065@var{envp}.
63ae7b63
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1066
1067The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
1068non-zero value otherwise.
b4012b75
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1069@end deftypefun
1070
7a68c94a 1071@deftypefun int feholdexcept (fenv_t *@var{envp})
d08a7e4c 1072@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1073@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1074Store the current floating-point environment in the object pointed to by
1075@var{envp}. Then clear all exception flags, and set the FPU to trap no
1076exceptions. Not all FPUs support trapping no exceptions; if
0f6b172f
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1077@code{feholdexcept} cannot set this mode, it returns nonzero value. If it
1078succeeds, it returns zero.
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1079@end deftypefun
1080
7a7a7ee5 1081The functions which restore the floating-point environment can take these
7a68c94a 1082kinds of arguments:
b4012b75 1083
7a68c94a
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1084@itemize @bullet
1085@item
1086Pointers to @code{fenv_t} objects, which were initialized previously by a
1087call to @code{fegetenv} or @code{feholdexcept}.
1088@item
1089@vindex FE_DFL_ENV
1090The special macro @code{FE_DFL_ENV} which represents the floating-point
1091environment as it was available at program start.
1092@item
7a7a7ee5
AJ
1093Implementation defined macros with names starting with @code{FE_} and
1094having type @code{fenv_t *}.
b4012b75 1095
7a68c94a 1096@vindex FE_NOMASK_ENV
1f77f049 1097If possible, @theglibc{} defines a macro @code{FE_NOMASK_ENV}
7a68c94a
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1098which represents an environment where every exception raised causes a
1099trap to occur. You can test for this macro using @code{#ifdef}. It is
1100only defined if @code{_GNU_SOURCE} is defined.
1101
1102Some platforms might define other predefined environments.
1103@end itemize
1104
1105@noindent
1106To set the floating-point environment, you can use either of these
1107functions:
1108
63ae7b63 1109@deftypefun int fesetenv (const fenv_t *@var{envp})
d08a7e4c 1110@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1111@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 1112Set the floating-point environment to that described by @var{envp}.
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1113
1114The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
1115non-zero value otherwise.
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1116@end deftypefun
1117
63ae7b63 1118@deftypefun int feupdateenv (const fenv_t *@var{envp})
d08a7e4c 1119@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1120@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1121Like @code{fesetenv}, this function sets the floating-point environment
1122to that described by @var{envp}. However, if any exceptions were
1123flagged in the status word before @code{feupdateenv} was called, they
1124remain flagged after the call. In other words, after @code{feupdateenv}
1125is called, the status word is the bitwise OR of the previous status word
1126and the one saved in @var{envp}.
63ae7b63
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1127
1128The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
1129non-zero value otherwise.
b4012b75
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1130@end deftypefun
1131
ec94343f
JM
1132@noindent
1133TS 18661-1:2014 defines additional functions to save and restore
1134floating-point control modes (such as the rounding mode and whether
1135traps are enabled) while leaving other status (such as raised flags)
1136unchanged.
1137
1138@vindex FE_DFL_MODE
1139The special macro @code{FE_DFL_MODE} may be passed to
1140@code{fesetmode}. It represents the floating-point control modes at
1141program start.
1142
ec94343f 1143@deftypefun int fegetmode (femode_t *@var{modep})
d08a7e4c 1144@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
ec94343f
JM
1145@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1146Store the floating-point control modes in the variable pointed to by
1147@var{modep}.
1148
1149The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
1150non-zero value otherwise.
1151@end deftypefun
1152
ec94343f 1153@deftypefun int fesetmode (const femode_t *@var{modep})
d08a7e4c 1154@standards{ISO, fenv.h}
ec94343f
JM
1155@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1156Set the floating-point control modes to those described by
1157@var{modep}.
1158
1159The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a
1160non-zero value otherwise.
1161@end deftypefun
1162
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1163@noindent
1164To control for individual exceptions if raising them causes a trap to
1165occur, you can use the following two functions.
1166
1167@strong{Portability Note:} These functions are all GNU extensions.
1168
05ef7ce9 1169@deftypefun int feenableexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 1170@standards{GNU, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1171@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
e4fd1876
RJ
1172This function enables traps for each of the exceptions as indicated by
1173the parameter @var{excepts}. The individual exceptions are described in
6e8afc1c 1174@ref{Status bit operations}. Only the specified exceptions are
05ef7ce9
UD
1175enabled, the status of the other exceptions is not changed.
1176
1177The function returns the previous enabled exceptions in case the
1178operation was successful, @code{-1} otherwise.
1179@end deftypefun
1180
05ef7ce9 1181@deftypefun int fedisableexcept (int @var{excepts})
d08a7e4c 1182@standards{GNU, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1183@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
e4fd1876
RJ
1184This function disables traps for each of the exceptions as indicated by
1185the parameter @var{excepts}. The individual exceptions are described in
6e8afc1c 1186@ref{Status bit operations}. Only the specified exceptions are
05ef7ce9
UD
1187disabled, the status of the other exceptions is not changed.
1188
1189The function returns the previous enabled exceptions in case the
1190operation was successful, @code{-1} otherwise.
1191@end deftypefun
1192
8ded91fb 1193@deftypefun int fegetexcept (void)
d08a7e4c 1194@standards{GNU, fenv.h}
b719dafd 1195@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
05ef7ce9
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1196The function returns a bitmask of all currently enabled exceptions. It
1197returns @code{-1} in case of failure.
6e8afc1c 1198@end deftypefun
05ef7ce9 1199
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1200@node Arithmetic Functions
1201@section Arithmetic Functions
b4012b75 1202
7a68c94a
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1203The C library provides functions to do basic operations on
1204floating-point numbers. These include absolute value, maximum and minimum,
1205normalization, bit twiddling, rounding, and a few others.
b4012b75 1206
7a68c94a
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1207@menu
1208* Absolute Value:: Absolute values of integers and floats.
1209* Normalization Functions:: Extracting exponents and putting them back.
1210* Rounding Functions:: Rounding floats to integers.
1211* Remainder Functions:: Remainders on division, precisely defined.
1212* FP Bit Twiddling:: Sign bit adjustment. Adding epsilon.
1213* FP Comparison Functions:: Comparisons without risk of exceptions.
1214* Misc FP Arithmetic:: Max, min, positive difference, multiply-add.
1215@end menu
b4012b75 1216
28f540f4 1217@node Absolute Value
7a68c94a 1218@subsection Absolute Value
28f540f4
RM
1219@cindex absolute value functions
1220
1221These functions are provided for obtaining the @dfn{absolute value} (or
1222@dfn{magnitude}) of a number. The absolute value of a real number
2d26e9eb 1223@var{x} is @var{x} if @var{x} is positive, @minus{}@var{x} if @var{x} is
28f540f4
RM
1224negative. For a complex number @var{z}, whose real part is @var{x} and
1225whose imaginary part is @var{y}, the absolute value is @w{@code{sqrt
1226(@var{x}*@var{x} + @var{y}*@var{y})}}.
1227
1228@pindex math.h
1229@pindex stdlib.h
fe0ec73e 1230Prototypes for @code{abs}, @code{labs} and @code{llabs} are in @file{stdlib.h};
e518937a 1231@code{imaxabs} is declared in @file{inttypes.h};
52a8e5cb
GG
1232the @code{fabs} functions are declared in @file{math.h};
1233the @code{cabs} functions are declared in @file{complex.h}.
28f540f4 1234
28f540f4 1235@deftypefun int abs (int @var{number})
7a68c94a
UD
1236@deftypefunx {long int} labs (long int @var{number})
1237@deftypefunx {long long int} llabs (long long int @var{number})
e518937a 1238@deftypefunx intmax_t imaxabs (intmax_t @var{number})
d08a7e4c
RJ
1239@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
1240@standardsx{imaxabs, ISO, inttypes.h}
b719dafd 1241@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 1242These functions return the absolute value of @var{number}.
28f540f4
RM
1243
1244Most computers use a two's complement integer representation, in which
1245the absolute value of @code{INT_MIN} (the smallest possible @code{int})
1246cannot be represented; thus, @w{@code{abs (INT_MIN)}} is not defined.
28f540f4 1247
ec751a23 1248@code{llabs} and @code{imaxdiv} are new to @w{ISO C99}.
0e4ee106
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1249
1250See @ref{Integers} for a description of the @code{intmax_t} type.
1251
fe0ec73e
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1252@end deftypefun
1253
28f540f4 1254@deftypefun double fabs (double @var{number})
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1255@deftypefunx float fabsf (float @var{number})
1256@deftypefunx {long double} fabsl (long double @var{number})
52a8e5cb
GG
1257@deftypefunx _FloatN fabsfN (_Float@var{N} @var{number})
1258@deftypefunx _FloatNx fabsfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{number})
d08a7e4c 1259@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1260@standardsx{fabsfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1261@standardsx{fabsfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1262@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
28f540f4
RM
1263This function returns the absolute value of the floating-point number
1264@var{number}.
1265@end deftypefun
1266
b4012b75 1267@deftypefun double cabs (complex double @var{z})
779ae82e
UD
1268@deftypefunx float cabsf (complex float @var{z})
1269@deftypefunx {long double} cabsl (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
1270@deftypefunx _FloatN cabsfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
1271@deftypefunx _FloatNx cabsfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 1272@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1273@standardsx{cabsfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
1274@standardsx{cabsfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 1275@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1276These functions return the absolute value of the complex number @var{z}
1277(@pxref{Complex Numbers}). The absolute value of a complex number is:
28f540f4
RM
1278
1279@smallexample
b4012b75 1280sqrt (creal (@var{z}) * creal (@var{z}) + cimag (@var{z}) * cimag (@var{z}))
28f540f4 1281@end smallexample
dfd2257a 1282
7a68c94a
UD
1283This function should always be used instead of the direct formula
1284because it takes special care to avoid losing precision. It may also
cf822e3c 1285take advantage of hardware support for this operation. See @code{hypot}
8b7fb588 1286in @ref{Exponents and Logarithms}.
28f540f4
RM
1287@end deftypefun
1288
1289@node Normalization Functions
7a68c94a 1290@subsection Normalization Functions
28f540f4
RM
1291@cindex normalization functions (floating-point)
1292
1293The functions described in this section are primarily provided as a way
1294to efficiently perform certain low-level manipulations on floating point
1295numbers that are represented internally using a binary radix;
1296see @ref{Floating Point Concepts}. These functions are required to
1297have equivalent behavior even if the representation does not use a radix
1298of 2, but of course they are unlikely to be particularly efficient in
1299those cases.
1300
1301@pindex math.h
1302All these functions are declared in @file{math.h}.
1303
28f540f4 1304@deftypefun double frexp (double @var{value}, int *@var{exponent})
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1305@deftypefunx float frexpf (float @var{value}, int *@var{exponent})
1306@deftypefunx {long double} frexpl (long double @var{value}, int *@var{exponent})
52a8e5cb
GG
1307@deftypefunx _FloatN frexpfN (_Float@var{N} @var{value}, int *@var{exponent})
1308@deftypefunx _FloatNx frexpfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{value}, int *@var{exponent})
d08a7e4c 1309@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1310@standardsx{frexpfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1311@standardsx{frexpfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1312@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1313These functions are used to split the number @var{value}
28f540f4
RM
1314into a normalized fraction and an exponent.
1315
1316If the argument @var{value} is not zero, the return value is @var{value}
56b672e9
BN
1317times a power of two, and its magnitude is always in the range 1/2
1318(inclusive) to 1 (exclusive). The corresponding exponent is stored in
28f540f4
RM
1319@code{*@var{exponent}}; the return value multiplied by 2 raised to this
1320exponent equals the original number @var{value}.
1321
1322For example, @code{frexp (12.8, &exponent)} returns @code{0.8} and
1323stores @code{4} in @code{exponent}.
1324
1325If @var{value} is zero, then the return value is zero and
1326zero is stored in @code{*@var{exponent}}.
1327@end deftypefun
1328
28f540f4 1329@deftypefun double ldexp (double @var{value}, int @var{exponent})
779ae82e
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1330@deftypefunx float ldexpf (float @var{value}, int @var{exponent})
1331@deftypefunx {long double} ldexpl (long double @var{value}, int @var{exponent})
52a8e5cb
GG
1332@deftypefunx _FloatN ldexpfN (_Float@var{N} @var{value}, int @var{exponent})
1333@deftypefunx _FloatNx ldexpfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{value}, int @var{exponent})
d08a7e4c 1334@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1335@standardsx{ldexpfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1336@standardsx{ldexpfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1337@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1338These functions return the result of multiplying the floating-point
28f540f4
RM
1339number @var{value} by 2 raised to the power @var{exponent}. (It can
1340be used to reassemble floating-point numbers that were taken apart
1341by @code{frexp}.)
1342
1343For example, @code{ldexp (0.8, 4)} returns @code{12.8}.
1344@end deftypefun
1345
7a68c94a 1346The following functions, which come from BSD, provide facilities
b7d03293
UD
1347equivalent to those of @code{ldexp} and @code{frexp}. See also the
1348@w{ISO C} function @code{logb} which originally also appeared in BSD.
52a8e5cb
GG
1349The @code{_Float@var{N}} and @code{_Float@var{N}} variants of the
1350following functions come from TS 18661-3:2015.
7a68c94a 1351
8ded91fb 1352@deftypefun double scalb (double @var{value}, double @var{exponent})
8ded91fb 1353@deftypefunx float scalbf (float @var{value}, float @var{exponent})
8ded91fb 1354@deftypefunx {long double} scalbl (long double @var{value}, long double @var{exponent})
d08a7e4c 1355@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 1356@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
1357The @code{scalb} function is the BSD name for @code{ldexp}.
1358@end deftypefun
1359
9ad027fb 1360@deftypefun double scalbn (double @var{x}, int @var{n})
9ad027fb 1361@deftypefunx float scalbnf (float @var{x}, int @var{n})
9ad027fb 1362@deftypefunx {long double} scalbnl (long double @var{x}, int @var{n})
52a8e5cb
GG
1363@deftypefunx _FloatN scalbnfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, int @var{n})
1364@deftypefunx _FloatNx scalbnfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, int @var{n})
d08a7e4c 1365@standards{BSD, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1366@standardsx{scalbnfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1367@standardsx{scalbnfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1368@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1369@code{scalbn} is identical to @code{scalb}, except that the exponent
1370@var{n} is an @code{int} instead of a floating-point number.
1371@end deftypefun
1372
9ad027fb 1373@deftypefun double scalbln (double @var{x}, long int @var{n})
9ad027fb 1374@deftypefunx float scalblnf (float @var{x}, long int @var{n})
9ad027fb 1375@deftypefunx {long double} scalblnl (long double @var{x}, long int @var{n})
52a8e5cb
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1376@deftypefunx _FloatN scalblnfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, long int @var{n})
1377@deftypefunx _FloatNx scalblnfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, long int @var{n})
d08a7e4c 1378@standards{BSD, math.h}
52a8e5cb
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1379@standardsx{scalblnfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1380@standardsx{scalblnfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1381@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1382@code{scalbln} is identical to @code{scalb}, except that the exponent
1383@var{n} is a @code{long int} instead of a floating-point number.
1384@end deftypefun
28f540f4 1385
8ded91fb 1386@deftypefun double significand (double @var{x})
8ded91fb 1387@deftypefunx float significandf (float @var{x})
8ded91fb 1388@deftypefunx {long double} significandl (long double @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1389@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 1390@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
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1391@code{significand} returns the mantissa of @var{x} scaled to the range
1392@math{[1, 2)}.
1393It is equivalent to @w{@code{scalb (@var{x}, (double) -ilogb (@var{x}))}}.
1394
1395This function exists mainly for use in certain standardized tests
1396of @w{IEEE 754} conformance.
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RM
1397@end deftypefun
1398
7a68c94a
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1399@node Rounding Functions
1400@subsection Rounding Functions
28f540f4
RM
1401@cindex converting floats to integers
1402
1403@pindex math.h
7a68c94a 1404The functions listed here perform operations such as rounding and
cf822e3c 1405truncation of floating-point values. Some of these functions convert
7a68c94a
UD
1406floating point numbers to integer values. They are all declared in
1407@file{math.h}.
28f540f4
RM
1408
1409You can also convert floating-point numbers to integers simply by
1410casting them to @code{int}. This discards the fractional part,
1411effectively rounding towards zero. However, this only works if the
1412result can actually be represented as an @code{int}---for very large
1413numbers, this is impossible. The functions listed here return the
1414result as a @code{double} instead to get around this problem.
1415
423c2b9d
JM
1416The @code{fromfp} functions use the following macros, from TS
141718661-1:2014, to specify the direction of rounding. These correspond
1418to the rounding directions defined in IEEE 754-2008.
1419
1420@vtable @code
423c2b9d 1421@item FP_INT_UPWARD
d08a7e4c 1422@standards{ISO, math.h}
423c2b9d
JM
1423Round toward @math{+@infinity{}}.
1424
423c2b9d 1425@item FP_INT_DOWNWARD
d08a7e4c 1426@standards{ISO, math.h}
423c2b9d
JM
1427Round toward @math{-@infinity{}}.
1428
423c2b9d 1429@item FP_INT_TOWARDZERO
d08a7e4c 1430@standards{ISO, math.h}
423c2b9d
JM
1431Round toward zero.
1432
423c2b9d 1433@item FP_INT_TONEARESTFROMZERO
d08a7e4c 1434@standards{ISO, math.h}
423c2b9d
JM
1435Round to nearest, ties round away from zero.
1436
423c2b9d 1437@item FP_INT_TONEAREST
d08a7e4c 1438@standards{ISO, math.h}
423c2b9d
JM
1439Round to nearest, ties round to even.
1440@end vtable
1441
28f540f4 1442@deftypefun double ceil (double @var{x})
779ae82e
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1443@deftypefunx float ceilf (float @var{x})
1444@deftypefunx {long double} ceill (long double @var{x})
52a8e5cb
GG
1445@deftypefunx _FloatN ceilfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1446@deftypefunx _FloatNx ceilfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1447@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1448@standardsx{ceilfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1449@standardsx{ceilfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1450@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1451These functions round @var{x} upwards to the nearest integer,
28f540f4
RM
1452returning that value as a @code{double}. Thus, @code{ceil (1.5)}
1453is @code{2.0}.
1454@end deftypefun
1455
28f540f4 1456@deftypefun double floor (double @var{x})
779ae82e
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1457@deftypefunx float floorf (float @var{x})
1458@deftypefunx {long double} floorl (long double @var{x})
52a8e5cb
GG
1459@deftypefunx _FloatN floorfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1460@deftypefunx _FloatNx floorfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1461@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
1462@standardsx{floorfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1463@standardsx{floorfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1464@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1465These functions round @var{x} downwards to the nearest
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1466integer, returning that value as a @code{double}. Thus, @code{floor
1467(1.5)} is @code{1.0} and @code{floor (-1.5)} is @code{-2.0}.
1468@end deftypefun
1469
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1470@deftypefun double trunc (double @var{x})
1471@deftypefunx float truncf (float @var{x})
1472@deftypefunx {long double} truncl (long double @var{x})
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1473@deftypefunx _FloatN truncfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1474@deftypefunx _FloatNx truncfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1475@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1476@standardsx{truncfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1477@standardsx{truncfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1478@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1479The @code{trunc} functions round @var{x} towards zero to the nearest
1480integer (returned in floating-point format). Thus, @code{trunc (1.5)}
1481is @code{1.0} and @code{trunc (-1.5)} is @code{-1.0}.
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1482@end deftypefun
1483
28f540f4 1484@deftypefun double rint (double @var{x})
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1485@deftypefunx float rintf (float @var{x})
1486@deftypefunx {long double} rintl (long double @var{x})
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1487@deftypefunx _FloatN rintfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1488@deftypefunx _FloatNx rintfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1489@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1490@standardsx{rintfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1491@standardsx{rintfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1492@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1493These functions round @var{x} to an integer value according to the
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1494current rounding mode. @xref{Floating Point Parameters}, for
1495information about the various rounding modes. The default
1496rounding mode is to round to the nearest integer; some machines
1497support other modes, but round-to-nearest is always used unless
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1498you explicitly select another.
1499
1500If @var{x} was not initially an integer, these functions raise the
1501inexact exception.
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1502@end deftypefun
1503
b4012b75 1504@deftypefun double nearbyint (double @var{x})
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1505@deftypefunx float nearbyintf (float @var{x})
1506@deftypefunx {long double} nearbyintl (long double @var{x})
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1507@deftypefunx _FloatN nearbyintfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1508@deftypefunx _FloatNx nearbyintfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1509@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1510@standardsx{nearbyintfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1511@standardsx{nearbyintfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1512@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1513These functions return the same value as the @code{rint} functions, but
1514do not raise the inexact exception if @var{x} is not an integer.
1515@end deftypefun
1516
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1517@deftypefun double round (double @var{x})
1518@deftypefunx float roundf (float @var{x})
1519@deftypefunx {long double} roundl (long double @var{x})
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1520@deftypefunx _FloatN roundfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1521@deftypefunx _FloatNx roundfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1522@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1523@standardsx{roundfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1524@standardsx{roundfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1525@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 1526These functions are similar to @code{rint}, but they round halfway
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1527cases away from zero instead of to the nearest integer (or other
1528current rounding mode).
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1529@end deftypefun
1530
41c67149 1531@deftypefun double roundeven (double @var{x})
41c67149 1532@deftypefunx float roundevenf (float @var{x})
41c67149 1533@deftypefunx {long double} roundevenl (long double @var{x})
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1534@deftypefunx _FloatN roundevenfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1535@deftypefunx _FloatNx roundevenfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1536@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1537@standardsx{roundevenfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1538@standardsx{roundevenfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
41c67149 1539@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1540These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, are similar
1541to @code{round}, but they round halfway cases to even instead of away
1542from zero.
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JM
1543@end deftypefun
1544
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1545@deftypefun {long int} lrint (double @var{x})
1546@deftypefunx {long int} lrintf (float @var{x})
1547@deftypefunx {long int} lrintl (long double @var{x})
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1548@deftypefunx {long int} lrintfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1549@deftypefunx {long int} lrintfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1550@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1551@standardsx{lrintfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1552@standardsx{lrintfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1553@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1554These functions are just like @code{rint}, but they return a
1555@code{long int} instead of a floating-point number.
1556@end deftypefun
1557
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1558@deftypefun {long long int} llrint (double @var{x})
1559@deftypefunx {long long int} llrintf (float @var{x})
1560@deftypefunx {long long int} llrintl (long double @var{x})
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1561@deftypefunx {long long int} llrintfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1562@deftypefunx {long long int} llrintfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1563@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1564@standardsx{llrintfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1565@standardsx{llrintfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1566@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1567These functions are just like @code{rint}, but they return a
1568@code{long long int} instead of a floating-point number.
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1569@end deftypefun
1570
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1571@deftypefun {long int} lround (double @var{x})
1572@deftypefunx {long int} lroundf (float @var{x})
1573@deftypefunx {long int} lroundl (long double @var{x})
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1574@deftypefunx {long int} lroundfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1575@deftypefunx {long int} lroundfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1576@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1577@standardsx{lroundfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1578@standardsx{lroundfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1579@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1580These functions are just like @code{round}, but they return a
1581@code{long int} instead of a floating-point number.
1582@end deftypefun
1583
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1584@deftypefun {long long int} llround (double @var{x})
1585@deftypefunx {long long int} llroundf (float @var{x})
1586@deftypefunx {long long int} llroundl (long double @var{x})
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1587@deftypefunx {long long int} llroundfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1588@deftypefunx {long long int} llroundfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1589@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1590@standardsx{llroundfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1591@standardsx{llroundfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1592@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1593These functions are just like @code{round}, but they return a
1594@code{long long int} instead of a floating-point number.
1595@end deftypefun
1596
423c2b9d 1597@deftypefun intmax_t fromfp (double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1598@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpf (float @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1599@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpl (long double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
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1600@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
1601@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1602@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfp (double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1603@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpf (float @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1604@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpl (long double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
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1605@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
1606@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1607@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpx (double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1608@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpxf (float @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1609@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpxl (long double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
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1610@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpxfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
1611@deftypefunx intmax_t fromfpxfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1612@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpx (double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1613@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpxf (float @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
423c2b9d 1614@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpxl (long double @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
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1615@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpxfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
1616@deftypefunx uintmax_t ufromfpxfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, int @var{round}, unsigned int @var{width})
d08a7e4c 1617@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1618@standardsx{fromfpfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1619@standardsx{fromfpfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1620@standardsx{ufromfpfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1621@standardsx{ufromfpfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1622@standardsx{fromfpxfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1623@standardsx{fromfpxfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1624@standardsx{ufromfpxfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1625@standardsx{ufromfpxfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1626@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1627These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, convert a
1628floating-point number to an integer according to the rounding direction
1629@var{round} (one of the @code{FP_INT_*} macros). If the integer is
1630outside the range of a signed or unsigned (depending on the return type
1631of the function) type of width @var{width} bits (or outside the range of
1632the return type, if @var{width} is larger), or if @var{x} is infinite or
1633NaN, or if @var{width} is zero, a domain error occurs and an unspecified
1634value is returned. The functions with an @samp{x} in their names raise
1635the inexact exception when a domain error does not occur and the
1636argument is not an integer; the other functions do not raise the inexact
423c2b9d
JM
1637exception.
1638@end deftypefun
1639
7a68c94a 1640
28f540f4 1641@deftypefun double modf (double @var{value}, double *@var{integer-part})
f2ea0f5b 1642@deftypefunx float modff (float @var{value}, float *@var{integer-part})
779ae82e 1643@deftypefunx {long double} modfl (long double @var{value}, long double *@var{integer-part})
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1644@deftypefunx _FloatN modffN (_Float@var{N} @var{value}, _Float@var{N} *@var{integer-part})
1645@deftypefunx _FloatNx modffNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{value}, _Float@var{N}x *@var{integer-part})
d08a7e4c 1646@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1647@standardsx{modffN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1648@standardsx{modffNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1649@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1650These functions break the argument @var{value} into an integer part and a
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1651fractional part (between @code{-1} and @code{1}, exclusive). Their sum
1652equals @var{value}. Each of the parts has the same sign as @var{value},
7a68c94a 1653and the integer part is always rounded toward zero.
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1654
1655@code{modf} stores the integer part in @code{*@var{integer-part}}, and
1656returns the fractional part. For example, @code{modf (2.5, &intpart)}
1657returns @code{0.5} and stores @code{2.0} into @code{intpart}.
1658@end deftypefun
1659
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1660@node Remainder Functions
1661@subsection Remainder Functions
1662
1663The functions in this section compute the remainder on division of two
1664floating-point numbers. Each is a little different; pick the one that
1665suits your problem.
1666
28f540f4 1667@deftypefun double fmod (double @var{numerator}, double @var{denominator})
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1668@deftypefunx float fmodf (float @var{numerator}, float @var{denominator})
1669@deftypefunx {long double} fmodl (long double @var{numerator}, long double @var{denominator})
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1670@deftypefunx _FloatN fmodfN (_Float@var{N} @var{numerator}, _Float@var{N} @var{denominator})
1671@deftypefunx _FloatNx fmodfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{numerator}, _Float@var{N}x @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 1672@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1673@standardsx{fmodfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1674@standardsx{fmodfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1675@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
b4012b75 1676These functions compute the remainder from the division of
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1677@var{numerator} by @var{denominator}. Specifically, the return value is
1678@code{@var{numerator} - @w{@var{n} * @var{denominator}}}, where @var{n}
1679is the quotient of @var{numerator} divided by @var{denominator}, rounded
1680towards zero to an integer. Thus, @w{@code{fmod (6.5, 2.3)}} returns
1681@code{1.9}, which is @code{6.5} minus @code{4.6}.
1682
1683The result has the same sign as the @var{numerator} and has magnitude
1684less than the magnitude of the @var{denominator}.
1685
7a68c94a 1686If @var{denominator} is zero, @code{fmod} signals a domain error.
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1687@end deftypefun
1688
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1689@deftypefun double remainder (double @var{numerator}, double @var{denominator})
1690@deftypefunx float remainderf (float @var{numerator}, float @var{denominator})
1691@deftypefunx {long double} remainderl (long double @var{numerator}, long double @var{denominator})
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1692@deftypefunx _FloatN remainderfN (_Float@var{N} @var{numerator}, _Float@var{N} @var{denominator})
1693@deftypefunx _FloatNx remainderfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{numerator}, _Float@var{N}x @var{denominator})
5070551c 1694@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1695@standardsx{remainderfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1696@standardsx{remainderfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1697@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
76cf9889 1698These functions are like @code{fmod} except that they round the
28f540f4 1699internal quotient @var{n} to the nearest integer instead of towards zero
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1700to an integer. For example, @code{remainder (6.5, 2.3)} returns
1701@code{-0.4}, which is @code{6.5} minus @code{6.9}.
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1702
1703The absolute value of the result is less than or equal to half the
1704absolute value of the @var{denominator}. The difference between
5070551c 1705@code{fmod (@var{numerator}, @var{denominator})} and @code{remainder
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1706(@var{numerator}, @var{denominator})} is always either
1707@var{denominator}, minus @var{denominator}, or zero.
1708
5070551c 1709If @var{denominator} is zero, @code{remainder} signals a domain error.
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1710@end deftypefun
1711
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1712@deftypefun double drem (double @var{numerator}, double @var{denominator})
1713@deftypefunx float dremf (float @var{numerator}, float @var{denominator})
1714@deftypefunx {long double} dreml (long double @var{numerator}, long double @var{denominator})
d08a7e4c 1715@standards{BSD, math.h}
b719dafd 1716@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
5070551c 1717This function is another name for @code{remainder}.
7a68c94a 1718@end deftypefun
28f540f4 1719
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1720@node FP Bit Twiddling
1721@subsection Setting and modifying single bits of FP values
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1722@cindex FP arithmetic
1723
7a68c94a 1724There are some operations that are too complicated or expensive to
ec751a23 1725perform by hand on floating-point numbers. @w{ISO C99} defines
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1726functions to do these operations, which mostly involve changing single
1727bits.
fe0ec73e 1728
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1729@deftypefun double copysign (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
1730@deftypefunx float copysignf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
1731@deftypefunx {long double} copysignl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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1732@deftypefunx _FloatN copysignfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
1733@deftypefunx _FloatNx copysignfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1734@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1735@standardsx{copysignfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1736@standardsx{copysignfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1737@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1738These functions return @var{x} but with the sign of @var{y}. They work
1739even if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN or zero. Both of these can carry a
1740sign (although not all implementations support it) and this is one of
1741the few operations that can tell the difference.
fe0ec73e 1742
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1743@code{copysign} never raises an exception.
1744@c except signalling NaNs
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1745
1746This function is defined in @w{IEC 559} (and the appendix with
1747recommended functions in @w{IEEE 754}/@w{IEEE 854}).
1748@end deftypefun
1749
fe0ec73e 1750@deftypefun int signbit (@emph{float-type} @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1751@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1752@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1753@code{signbit} is a generic macro which can work on all floating-point
1754types. It returns a nonzero value if the value of @var{x} has its sign
1755bit set.
1756
7a68c94a
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1757This is not the same as @code{x < 0.0}, because @w{IEEE 754} floating
1758point allows zero to be signed. The comparison @code{-0.0 < 0.0} is
1759false, but @code{signbit (-0.0)} will return a nonzero value.
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1760@end deftypefun
1761
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1762@deftypefun double nextafter (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
1763@deftypefunx float nextafterf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
1764@deftypefunx {long double} nextafterl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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1765@deftypefunx _FloatN nextafterfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
1766@deftypefunx _FloatNx nextafterfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1767@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1768@standardsx{nextafterfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1769@standardsx{nextafterfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 1770@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
fe0ec73e 1771The @code{nextafter} function returns the next representable neighbor of
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1772@var{x} in the direction towards @var{y}. The size of the step between
1773@var{x} and the result depends on the type of the result. If
0a7fef01 1774@math{@var{x} = @var{y}} the function simply returns @var{y}. If either
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1775value is @code{NaN}, @code{NaN} is returned. Otherwise
1776a value corresponding to the value of the least significant bit in the
1777mantissa is added or subtracted, depending on the direction.
1778@code{nextafter} will signal overflow or underflow if the result goes
1779outside of the range of normalized numbers.
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1780
1781This function is defined in @w{IEC 559} (and the appendix with
1782recommended functions in @w{IEEE 754}/@w{IEEE 854}).
1783@end deftypefun
1784
36fe9ac9 1785@deftypefun double nexttoward (double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
36fe9ac9 1786@deftypefunx float nexttowardf (float @var{x}, long double @var{y})
36fe9ac9 1787@deftypefunx {long double} nexttowardl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1788@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1789@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1790These functions are identical to the corresponding versions of
1791@code{nextafter} except that their second argument is a @code{long
1792double}.
1793@end deftypefun
1794
41a359e2 1795@deftypefun double nextup (double @var{x})
41a359e2 1796@deftypefunx float nextupf (float @var{x})
41a359e2 1797@deftypefunx {long double} nextupl (long double @var{x})
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1798@deftypefunx _FloatN nextupfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1799@deftypefunx _FloatNx nextupfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1800@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1801@standardsx{nextupfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1802@standardsx{nextupfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
41a359e2
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1803@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1804The @code{nextup} function returns the next representable neighbor of @var{x}
1805in the direction of positive infinity. If @var{x} is the smallest negative
1806subnormal number in the type of @var{x} the function returns @code{-0}. If
1807@math{@var{x} = @code{0}} the function returns the smallest positive subnormal
1808number in the type of @var{x}. If @var{x} is NaN, NaN is returned.
1809If @var{x} is @math{+@infinity{}}, @math{+@infinity{}} is returned.
52a8e5cb 1810@code{nextup} is from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015.
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RS
1811@code{nextup} never raises an exception except for signaling NaNs.
1812@end deftypefun
1813
41a359e2 1814@deftypefun double nextdown (double @var{x})
41a359e2 1815@deftypefunx float nextdownf (float @var{x})
41a359e2 1816@deftypefunx {long double} nextdownl (long double @var{x})
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1817@deftypefunx _FloatN nextdownfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x})
1818@deftypefunx _FloatNx nextdownfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x})
d08a7e4c 1819@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1820@standardsx{nextdownfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1821@standardsx{nextdownfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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1822@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1823The @code{nextdown} function returns the next representable neighbor of @var{x}
1824in the direction of negative infinity. If @var{x} is the smallest positive
1825subnormal number in the type of @var{x} the function returns @code{+0}. If
1826@math{@var{x} = @code{0}} the function returns the smallest negative subnormal
1827number in the type of @var{x}. If @var{x} is NaN, NaN is returned.
1828If @var{x} is @math{-@infinity{}}, @math{-@infinity{}} is returned.
52a8e5cb 1829@code{nextdown} is from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015.
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RS
1830@code{nextdown} never raises an exception except for signaling NaNs.
1831@end deftypefun
1832
fe0ec73e 1833@cindex NaN
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1834@deftypefun double nan (const char *@var{tagp})
1835@deftypefunx float nanf (const char *@var{tagp})
1836@deftypefunx {long double} nanl (const char *@var{tagp})
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1837@deftypefunx _FloatN nanfN (const char *@var{tagp})
1838@deftypefunx _FloatNx nanfNx (const char *@var{tagp})
d08a7e4c 1839@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1840@standardsx{nanfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1841@standardsx{nanfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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1842@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1843@c The unsafe-but-ruled-safe locale use comes from strtod.
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1844The @code{nan} function returns a representation of NaN, provided that
1845NaN is supported by the target platform.
1846@code{nan ("@var{n-char-sequence}")} is equivalent to
1847@code{strtod ("NAN(@var{n-char-sequence})")}.
1848
1849The argument @var{tagp} is used in an unspecified manner. On @w{IEEE
1850754} systems, there are many representations of NaN, and @var{tagp}
1851selects one. On other systems it may do nothing.
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1852@end deftypefun
1853
eaf5ad0b 1854@deftypefun int canonicalize (double *@var{cx}, const double *@var{x})
eaf5ad0b 1855@deftypefunx int canonicalizef (float *@var{cx}, const float *@var{x})
eaf5ad0b 1856@deftypefunx int canonicalizel (long double *@var{cx}, const long double *@var{x})
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1857@deftypefunx int canonicalizefN (_Float@var{N} *@var{cx}, const _Float@var{N} *@var{x})
1858@deftypefunx int canonicalizefNx (_Float@var{N}x *@var{cx}, const _Float@var{N}x *@var{x})
d08a7e4c 1859@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1860@standardsx{canonicalizefN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1861@standardsx{canonicalizefNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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1862@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1863In some floating-point formats, some values have canonical (preferred)
1864and noncanonical encodings (for IEEE interchange binary formats, all
1865encodings are canonical). These functions, defined by TS
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186618661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, attempt to produce a canonical version
1867of the floating-point value pointed to by @var{x}; if that value is a
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1868signaling NaN, they raise the invalid exception and produce a quiet
1869NaN. If a canonical value is produced, it is stored in the object
1870pointed to by @var{cx}, and these functions return zero. Otherwise
1871(if a canonical value could not be produced because the object pointed
1872to by @var{x} is not a valid representation of any floating-point
1873value), the object pointed to by @var{cx} is unchanged and a nonzero
1874value is returned.
1875
1876Note that some formats have multiple encodings of a value which are
1877all equally canonical; when such an encoding is used as an input to
1878this function, any such encoding of the same value (or of the
1879corresponding quiet NaN, if that value is a signaling NaN) may be
1880produced as output.
1881@end deftypefun
1882
f8e8b8ed 1883@deftypefun double getpayload (const double *@var{x})
f8e8b8ed 1884@deftypefunx float getpayloadf (const float *@var{x})
f8e8b8ed 1885@deftypefunx {long double} getpayloadl (const long double *@var{x})
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1886@deftypefunx _FloatN getpayloadfN (const _Float@var{N} *@var{x})
1887@deftypefunx _FloatNx getpayloadfNx (const _Float@var{N}x *@var{x})
d08a7e4c 1888@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1889@standardsx{getpayloadfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1890@standardsx{getpayloadfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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1891@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1892IEEE 754 defines the @dfn{payload} of a NaN to be an integer value
1893encoded in the representation of the NaN. Payloads are typically
1894propagated from NaN inputs to the result of a floating-point
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1895operation. These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS
189618661-3:2015, return the payload of the NaN pointed to by @var{x}
1897(returned as a positive integer, or positive zero, represented as a
1898floating-point number); if @var{x} is not a NaN, they return an
1899unspecified value. They raise no floating-point exceptions even for
1900signaling NaNs.
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1901@end deftypefun
1902
eb3c12c7 1903@deftypefun int setpayload (double *@var{x}, double @var{payload})
eb3c12c7 1904@deftypefunx int setpayloadf (float *@var{x}, float @var{payload})
eb3c12c7 1905@deftypefunx int setpayloadl (long double *@var{x}, long double @var{payload})
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1906@deftypefunx int setpayloadfN (_Float@var{N} *@var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{payload})
1907@deftypefunx int setpayloadfNx (_Float@var{N}x *@var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{payload})
d08a7e4c 1908@standards{ISO, math.h}
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1909@standardsx{setpayloadfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1910@standardsx{setpayloadfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
eb3c12c7 1911@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1912These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, set the
1913object pointed to by @var{x} to a quiet NaN with payload @var{payload}
1914and a zero sign bit and return zero. If @var{payload} is not a
1915positive-signed integer that is a valid payload for a quiet NaN of the
1916given type, the object pointed to by @var{x} is set to positive zero and
1917a nonzero value is returned. They raise no floating-point exceptions.
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1918@end deftypefun
1919
457663a7 1920@deftypefun int setpayloadsig (double *@var{x}, double @var{payload})
457663a7 1921@deftypefunx int setpayloadsigf (float *@var{x}, float @var{payload})
457663a7 1922@deftypefunx int setpayloadsigl (long double *@var{x}, long double @var{payload})
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1923@deftypefunx int setpayloadsigfN (_Float@var{N} *@var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{payload})
1924@deftypefunx int setpayloadsigfNx (_Float@var{N}x *@var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{payload})
d08a7e4c 1925@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
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1926@standardsx{setpayloadsigfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
1927@standardsx{setpayloadsigfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
457663a7 1928@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
52a8e5cb
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1929These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, set the
1930object pointed to by @var{x} to a signaling NaN with payload
1931@var{payload} and a zero sign bit and return zero. If @var{payload} is
1932not a positive-signed integer that is a valid payload for a signaling
1933NaN of the given type, the object pointed to by @var{x} is set to
1934positive zero and a nonzero value is returned. They raise no
1935floating-point exceptions.
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1936@end deftypefun
1937
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1938@node FP Comparison Functions
1939@subsection Floating-Point Comparison Functions
1940@cindex unordered comparison
fe0ec73e 1941
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1942The standard C comparison operators provoke exceptions when one or other
1943of the operands is NaN. For example,
1944
1945@smallexample
1946int v = a < 1.0;
1947@end smallexample
1948
1949@noindent
1950will raise an exception if @var{a} is NaN. (This does @emph{not}
1951happen with @code{==} and @code{!=}; those merely return false and true,
1952respectively, when NaN is examined.) Frequently this exception is
ec751a23 1953undesirable. @w{ISO C99} therefore defines comparison functions that
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1954do not raise exceptions when NaN is examined. All of the functions are
1955implemented as macros which allow their arguments to be of any
1956floating-point type. The macros are guaranteed to evaluate their
1e7c8fcc 1957arguments only once. TS 18661-1:2014 adds such a macro for an
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1958equality comparison that @emph{does} raise an exception for a NaN
1959argument; it also adds functions that provide a total ordering on all
1960floating-point values, including NaNs, without raising any exceptions
1961even for signaling NaNs.
7a68c94a 1962
7a68c94a 1963@deftypefn Macro int isgreater (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1964@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1965@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1966This macro determines whether the argument @var{x} is greater than
1967@var{y}. It is equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) > (@var{y})}, but no
1968exception is raised if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
1969@end deftypefn
1970
7a68c94a 1971@deftypefn Macro int isgreaterequal (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1972@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1973@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1974This macro determines whether the argument @var{x} is greater than or
1975equal to @var{y}. It is equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) >= (@var{y})}, but no
1976exception is raised if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
1977@end deftypefn
1978
7a68c94a 1979@deftypefn Macro int isless (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1980@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1981@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1982This macro determines whether the argument @var{x} is less than @var{y}.
1983It is equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) < (@var{y})}, but no exception is
1984raised if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
1985@end deftypefn
1986
7a68c94a 1987@deftypefn Macro int islessequal (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1988@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1989@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1990This macro determines whether the argument @var{x} is less than or equal
1991to @var{y}. It is equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) <= (@var{y})}, but no
1992exception is raised if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
1993@end deftypefn
1994
7a68c94a 1995@deftypefn Macro int islessgreater (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 1996@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 1997@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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1998This macro determines whether the argument @var{x} is less or greater
1999than @var{y}. It is equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) < (@var{y}) ||
2000(@var{x}) > (@var{y})} (although it only evaluates @var{x} and @var{y}
2001once), but no exception is raised if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
2002
2003This macro is not equivalent to @code{@var{x} != @var{y}}, because that
2004expression is true if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN.
2005@end deftypefn
2006
7a68c94a 2007@deftypefn Macro int isunordered (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2008@standards{ISO, math.h}
b719dafd 2009@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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2010This macro determines whether its arguments are unordered. In other
2011words, it is true if @var{x} or @var{y} are NaN, and false otherwise.
2012@end deftypefn
2013
1e7c8fcc 2014@deftypefn Macro int iseqsig (@emph{real-floating} @var{x}, @emph{real-floating} @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2015@standards{ISO, math.h}
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2016@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2017This macro determines whether its arguments are equal. It is
2018equivalent to @code{(@var{x}) == (@var{y})}, but it raises the invalid
c32bb03c 2019exception and sets @code{errno} to @code{EDOM} if either argument is a
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2020NaN.
2021@end deftypefn
2022
5e9d98a3 2023@deftypefun int totalorder (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
5e9d98a3 2024@deftypefunx int totalorderf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
5e9d98a3 2025@deftypefunx int totalorderl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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2026@deftypefunx int totalorderfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2027@deftypefunx int totalorderfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
1b009d5a 2028@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
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2029@standardsx{totalorderfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2030@standardsx{totalorderfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
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2031@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2032These functions determine whether the total order relationship,
2033defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for @var{x} and @var{y}, returning
2034nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false. No exceptions are
2035raised even for signaling NaNs. The relationship is true if they are
2036the same floating-point value (including sign for zero and NaNs, and
2037payload for NaNs), or if @var{x} comes before @var{y} in the following
2038order: negative quiet NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative
2039signaling NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative infinity;
2040finite numbers, in ascending order, with negative zero before positive
2041zero; positive infinity; positive signaling NaNs, in order of
2042increasing payload; positive quiet NaNs, in order of increasing
2043payload.
2044@end deftypefun
2045
cc6a8d74 2046@deftypefun int totalordermag (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
cc6a8d74 2047@deftypefunx int totalordermagf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
cc6a8d74 2048@deftypefunx int totalordermagl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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2049@deftypefunx int totalordermagfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2050@deftypefunx int totalordermagfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
1b009d5a 2051@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
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2052@standardsx{totalordermagfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2053@standardsx{totalordermagfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
cc6a8d74
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2054@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2055These functions determine whether the total order relationship,
2056defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for the absolute values of @var{x}
2057and @var{y}, returning nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false.
2058No exceptions are raised even for signaling NaNs.
2059@end deftypefun
2060
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2061Not all machines provide hardware support for these operations. On
2062machines that don't, the macros can be very slow. Therefore, you should
2063not use these functions when NaN is not a concern.
2064
48b22986 2065@strong{NB:} There are no macros @code{isequal} or @code{isunequal}.
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2066They are unnecessary, because the @code{==} and @code{!=} operators do
2067@emph{not} throw an exception if one or both of the operands are NaN.
2068
2069@node Misc FP Arithmetic
2070@subsection Miscellaneous FP arithmetic functions
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2071@cindex minimum
2072@cindex maximum
7a68c94a
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2073@cindex positive difference
2074@cindex multiply-add
fe0ec73e 2075
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2076The functions in this section perform miscellaneous but common
2077operations that are awkward to express with C operators. On some
2078processors these functions can use special machine instructions to
2079perform these operations faster than the equivalent C code.
fe0ec73e 2080
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2081@deftypefun double fmin (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2082@deftypefunx float fminf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
2083@deftypefunx {long double} fminl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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2084@deftypefunx _FloatN fminfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2085@deftypefunx _FloatNx fminfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2086@standards{ISO, math.h}
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2087@standardsx{fminfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2088@standardsx{fminfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 2089@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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2090The @code{fmin} function returns the lesser of the two values @var{x}
2091and @var{y}. It is similar to the expression
2092@smallexample
2093((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y))
2094@end smallexample
2095except that @var{x} and @var{y} are only evaluated once.
fe0ec73e 2096
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2097If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments
2098are NaN, NaN is returned.
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2099@end deftypefun
2100
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2101@deftypefun double fmax (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2102@deftypefunx float fmaxf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
2103@deftypefunx {long double} fmaxl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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2104@deftypefunx _FloatN fmaxfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2105@deftypefunx _FloatNx fmaxfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2106@standards{ISO, math.h}
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2107@standardsx{fmaxfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2108@standardsx{fmaxfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 2109@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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2110The @code{fmax} function returns the greater of the two values @var{x}
2111and @var{y}.
fe0ec73e 2112
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2113If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments
2114are NaN, NaN is returned.
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2115@end deftypefun
2116
525f8039 2117@deftypefun double fminmag (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
525f8039 2118@deftypefunx float fminmagf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
525f8039 2119@deftypefunx {long double} fminmagl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
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2120@deftypefunx _FloatN fminmagfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2121@deftypefunx _FloatNx fminmagfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2122@standards{ISO, math.h}
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2123@standardsx{fminmagfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2124@standardsx{fminmagfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
525f8039 2125@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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2126These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return
2127whichever of the two values @var{x} and @var{y} has the smaller absolute
2128value. If both have the same absolute value, or either is NaN, they
2129behave the same as the @code{fmin} functions.
525f8039
JM
2130@end deftypefun
2131
525f8039 2132@deftypefun double fmaxmag (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
525f8039 2133@deftypefunx float fmaxmagf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
525f8039 2134@deftypefunx {long double} fmaxmagl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
52a8e5cb
GG
2135@deftypefunx _FloatN fmaxmagfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2136@deftypefunx _FloatNx fmaxmagfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2137@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2138@standardsx{fmaxmagfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2139@standardsx{fmaxmagfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
525f8039
JM
2140@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2141These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014, return whichever of the two
2142values @var{x} and @var{y} has the greater absolute value. If both
2143have the same absolute value, or either is NaN, they behave the same
2144as the @code{fmax} functions.
2145@end deftypefun
2146
fe0ec73e
UD
2147@deftypefun double fdim (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2148@deftypefunx float fdimf (float @var{x}, float @var{y})
2149@deftypefunx {long double} fdiml (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
52a8e5cb
GG
2150@deftypefunx _FloatN fdimfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2151@deftypefunx _FloatNx fdimfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
d08a7e4c 2152@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2153@standardsx{fdimfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2154@standardsx{fdimfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
b719dafd 2155@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2156The @code{fdim} function returns the positive difference between
2157@var{x} and @var{y}. The positive difference is @math{@var{x} -
2158@var{y}} if @var{x} is greater than @var{y}, and @math{0} otherwise.
fe0ec73e 2159
7a68c94a 2160If @var{x}, @var{y}, or both are NaN, NaN is returned.
fe0ec73e
UD
2161@end deftypefun
2162
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2163@deftypefun double fma (double @var{x}, double @var{y}, double @var{z})
2164@deftypefunx float fmaf (float @var{x}, float @var{y}, float @var{z})
2165@deftypefunx {long double} fmal (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y}, long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2166@deftypefunx _FloatN fmafN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y}, _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2167@deftypefunx _FloatNx fmafNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y}, _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2168@standards{ISO, math.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2169@standardsx{fmafN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2170@standardsx{fmafNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
fe0ec73e 2171@cindex butterfly
b719dafd 2172@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2173The @code{fma} function performs floating-point multiply-add. This is
2174the operation @math{(@var{x} @mul{} @var{y}) + @var{z}}, but the
2175intermediate result is not rounded to the destination type. This can
2176sometimes improve the precision of a calculation.
2177
2178This function was introduced because some processors have a special
2179instruction to perform multiply-add. The C compiler cannot use it
2180directly, because the expression @samp{x*y + z} is defined to round the
2181intermediate result. @code{fma} lets you choose when you want to round
2182only once.
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UD
2183
2184@vindex FP_FAST_FMA
7a68c94a
UD
2185On processors which do not implement multiply-add in hardware,
2186@code{fma} can be very slow since it must avoid intermediate rounding.
2187@file{math.h} defines the symbols @code{FP_FAST_FMA},
2188@code{FP_FAST_FMAF}, and @code{FP_FAST_FMAL} when the corresponding
2189version of @code{fma} is no slower than the expression @samp{x*y + z}.
1f77f049 2190In @theglibc{}, this always means the operation is implemented in
7a68c94a 2191hardware.
fe0ec73e
UD
2192@end deftypefun
2193
d8742dd8
JM
2194@deftypefun float fadd (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2195@deftypefunx float faddl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2196@deftypefunx double daddl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2197@deftypefunx _FloatM fMaddfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2198@deftypefunx _FloatM fMaddfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2199@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxaddfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2200@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxaddfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2201@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
2202@standardsx{fMaddfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2203@standardsx{fMaddfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2204@standardsx{fMxaddfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2205@standardsx{fMxaddfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2206@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2207These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return
2208@math{@var{x} + @var{y}}, rounded once to the return type of the
2209function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the
2210arguments.
2211@end deftypefun
2212
8d3f9e85
JM
2213@deftypefun float fsub (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2214@deftypefunx float fsubl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2215@deftypefunx double dsubl (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2216@deftypefunx _FloatM fMsubfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2217@deftypefunx _FloatM fMsubfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2218@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxsubfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2219@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxsubfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2220@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
2221@standardsx{fMsubfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2222@standardsx{fMsubfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2223@standardsx{fMxsubfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2224@standardsx{fMxsubfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2225@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2226These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return
2227@math{@var{x} - @var{y}}, rounded once to the return type of the
2228function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the
2229arguments.
2230@end deftypefun
2231
69a01461
JM
2232@deftypefun float fmul (double @var{x}, double @var{y})
2233@deftypefunx float fmull (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2234@deftypefunx double dmull (long double @var{x}, long double @var{y})
2235@deftypefunx _FloatM fMmulfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2236@deftypefunx _FloatM fMmulfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2237@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxmulfN (_Float@var{N} @var{x}, _Float@var{N} @var{y})
2238@deftypefunx _FloatMx fMxmulfNx (_Float@var{N}x @var{x}, _Float@var{N}x @var{y})
2239@standards{TS 18661-1:2014, math.h}
2240@standardsx{fMmulfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2241@standardsx{fMmulfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2242@standardsx{fMxmulfN, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2243@standardsx{fMxmulfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, math.h}
2244@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2245These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return
2246@math{@var{x} * @var{y}}, rounded once to the return type of the
2247function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the
2248arguments.
2249@end deftypefun
2250
7a68c94a
UD
2251@node Complex Numbers
2252@section Complex Numbers
2253@pindex complex.h
2254@cindex complex numbers
2255
ec751a23 2256@w{ISO C99} introduces support for complex numbers in C. This is done
7a68c94a
UD
2257with a new type qualifier, @code{complex}. It is a keyword if and only
2258if @file{complex.h} has been included. There are three complex types,
2259corresponding to the three real types: @code{float complex},
2260@code{double complex}, and @code{long double complex}.
2261
52a8e5cb
GG
2262Likewise, on machines that have support for @code{_Float@var{N}} or
2263@code{_Float@var{N}x} enabled, the complex types @code{_Float@var{N}
2264complex} and @code{_Float@var{N}x complex} are also available if
2265@file{complex.h} has been included; @pxref{Mathematics}.
2266
7a68c94a
UD
2267To construct complex numbers you need a way to indicate the imaginary
2268part of a number. There is no standard notation for an imaginary
2269floating point constant. Instead, @file{complex.h} defines two macros
2270that can be used to create complex numbers.
2271
2272@deftypevr Macro {const float complex} _Complex_I
1b009d5a 2273@standards{C99, complex.h}
7a68c94a
UD
2274This macro is a representation of the complex number ``@math{0+1i}''.
2275Multiplying a real floating-point value by @code{_Complex_I} gives a
2276complex number whose value is purely imaginary. You can use this to
2277construct complex constants:
2278
2279@smallexample
2280@math{3.0 + 4.0i} = @code{3.0 + 4.0 * _Complex_I}
2281@end smallexample
2282
2283Note that @code{_Complex_I * _Complex_I} has the value @code{-1}, but
2284the type of that value is @code{complex}.
2285@end deftypevr
2286
2287@c Put this back in when gcc supports _Imaginary_I. It's too confusing.
2288@ignore
2289@noindent
2290Without an optimizing compiler this is more expensive than the use of
2291@code{_Imaginary_I} but with is better than nothing. You can avoid all
2292the hassles if you use the @code{I} macro below if the name is not
2293problem.
2294
2295@deftypevr Macro {const float imaginary} _Imaginary_I
2296This macro is a representation of the value ``@math{1i}''. I.e., it is
2297the value for which
2298
2299@smallexample
2300_Imaginary_I * _Imaginary_I = -1
2301@end smallexample
2302
2303@noindent
2304The result is not of type @code{float imaginary} but instead @code{float}.
2305One can use it to easily construct complex number like in
2306
2307@smallexample
23083.0 - _Imaginary_I * 4.0
2309@end smallexample
2310
2311@noindent
2312which results in the complex number with a real part of 3.0 and a
2313imaginary part -4.0.
2314@end deftypevr
2315@end ignore
2316
2317@noindent
2318@code{_Complex_I} is a bit of a mouthful. @file{complex.h} also defines
2319a shorter name for the same constant.
2320
2321@deftypevr Macro {const float complex} I
1b009d5a 2322@standards{C99, complex.h}
7a68c94a
UD
2323This macro has exactly the same value as @code{_Complex_I}. Most of the
2324time it is preferable. However, it causes problems if you want to use
2325the identifier @code{I} for something else. You can safely write
2326
2327@smallexample
2328#include <complex.h>
2329#undef I
2330@end smallexample
2331
2332@noindent
2333if you need @code{I} for your own purposes. (In that case we recommend
2334you also define some other short name for @code{_Complex_I}, such as
2335@code{J}.)
2336
2337@ignore
2338If the implementation does not support the @code{imaginary} types
2339@code{I} is defined as @code{_Complex_I} which is the second best
2340solution. It still can be used in the same way but requires a most
2341clever compiler to get the same results.
2342@end ignore
2343@end deftypevr
2344
2345@node Operations on Complex
2346@section Projections, Conjugates, and Decomposing of Complex Numbers
2347@cindex project complex numbers
2348@cindex conjugate complex numbers
2349@cindex decompose complex numbers
2350@pindex complex.h
2351
ec751a23 2352@w{ISO C99} also defines functions that perform basic operations on
7a68c94a
UD
2353complex numbers, such as decomposition and conjugation. The prototypes
2354for all these functions are in @file{complex.h}. All functions are
2355available in three variants, one for each of the three complex types.
2356
7a68c94a
UD
2357@deftypefun double creal (complex double @var{z})
2358@deftypefunx float crealf (complex float @var{z})
2359@deftypefunx {long double} creall (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2360@deftypefunx _FloatN crealfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2361@deftypefunx _FloatNx crealfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2362@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2363@standardsx{crealfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
2364@standardsx{crealfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 2365@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2366These functions return the real part of the complex number @var{z}.
2367@end deftypefun
2368
7a68c94a
UD
2369@deftypefun double cimag (complex double @var{z})
2370@deftypefunx float cimagf (complex float @var{z})
2371@deftypefunx {long double} cimagl (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2372@deftypefunx _FloatN cimagfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2373@deftypefunx _FloatNx cimagfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2374@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2375@standardsx{cimagfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
2376@standardsx{cimagfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 2377@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2378These functions return the imaginary part of the complex number @var{z}.
2379@end deftypefun
2380
7a68c94a
UD
2381@deftypefun {complex double} conj (complex double @var{z})
2382@deftypefunx {complex float} conjf (complex float @var{z})
2383@deftypefunx {complex long double} conjl (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2384@deftypefunx {complex _FloatN} conjfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2385@deftypefunx {complex _FloatNx} conjfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2386@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2387@standardsx{conjfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
2388@standardsx{conjfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 2389@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2390These functions return the conjugate value of the complex number
2391@var{z}. The conjugate of a complex number has the same real part and a
2392negated imaginary part. In other words, @samp{conj(a + bi) = a + -bi}.
2393@end deftypefun
2394
7a68c94a
UD
2395@deftypefun double carg (complex double @var{z})
2396@deftypefunx float cargf (complex float @var{z})
2397@deftypefunx {long double} cargl (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2398@deftypefunx _FloatN cargfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2399@deftypefunx _FloatNx cargfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2400@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2401@standardsx{cargfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
2402@standardsx{cargfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 2403@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2404These functions return the argument of the complex number @var{z}.
2405The argument of a complex number is the angle in the complex plane
2406between the positive real axis and a line passing through zero and the
01f49f59
JT
2407number. This angle is measured in the usual fashion and ranges from
2408@math{-@pi{}} to @math{@pi{}}.
7a68c94a 2409
01f49f59 2410@code{carg} has a branch cut along the negative real axis.
7a68c94a
UD
2411@end deftypefun
2412
7a68c94a
UD
2413@deftypefun {complex double} cproj (complex double @var{z})
2414@deftypefunx {complex float} cprojf (complex float @var{z})
2415@deftypefunx {complex long double} cprojl (complex long double @var{z})
52a8e5cb
GG
2416@deftypefunx {complex _FloatN} cprojfN (complex _Float@var{N} @var{z})
2417@deftypefunx {complex _FloatNx} cprojfNx (complex _Float@var{N}x @var{z})
d08a7e4c 2418@standards{ISO, complex.h}
52a8e5cb
GG
2419@standardsx{cprojfN, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
2420@standardsx{cprojfNx, TS 18661-3:2015, complex.h}
b719dafd 2421@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 2422These functions return the projection of the complex value @var{z} onto
9dcc8f11 2423the Riemann sphere. Values with an infinite imaginary part are projected
7a68c94a
UD
2424to positive infinity on the real axis, even if the real part is NaN. If
2425the real part is infinite, the result is equivalent to
2426
2427@smallexample
2428INFINITY + I * copysign (0.0, cimag (z))
2429@end smallexample
2430@end deftypefun
fe0ec73e 2431
28f540f4
RM
2432@node Parsing of Numbers
2433@section Parsing of Numbers
2434@cindex parsing numbers (in formatted input)
2435@cindex converting strings to numbers
2436@cindex number syntax, parsing
2437@cindex syntax, for reading numbers
2438
2439This section describes functions for ``reading'' integer and
2440floating-point numbers from a string. It may be more convenient in some
2441cases to use @code{sscanf} or one of the related functions; see
2442@ref{Formatted Input}. But often you can make a program more robust by
2443finding the tokens in the string by hand, then converting the numbers
2444one by one.
2445
2446@menu
2447* Parsing of Integers:: Functions for conversion of integer values.
2448* Parsing of Floats:: Functions for conversion of floating-point
2449 values.
2450@end menu
2451
2452@node Parsing of Integers
2453@subsection Parsing of Integers
2454
2455@pindex stdlib.h
b642f101
UD
2456@pindex wchar.h
2457The @samp{str} functions are declared in @file{stdlib.h} and those
2458beginning with @samp{wcs} are declared in @file{wchar.h}. One might
2459wonder about the use of @code{restrict} in the prototypes of the
2460functions in this section. It is seemingly useless but the @w{ISO C}
2461standard uses it (for the functions defined there) so we have to do it
2462as well.
28f540f4 2463
b642f101 2464@deftypefun {long int} strtol (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2465@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd
AO
2466@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2467@c strtol uses the thread-local pointer to the locale in effect, and
2468@c strtol_l loads the LC_NUMERIC locale data from it early on and once,
2469@c but if the locale is the global locale, and another thread calls
2470@c setlocale in a way that modifies the pointer to the LC_CTYPE locale
2471@c category, the behavior of e.g. IS*, TOUPPER will vary throughout the
2472@c execution of the function, because they re-read the locale data from
2473@c the given locale pointer. We solved this by documenting setlocale as
2474@c MT-Unsafe.
28f540f4
RM
2475The @code{strtol} (``string-to-long'') function converts the initial
2476part of @var{string} to a signed integer, which is returned as a value
b8fe19fa 2477of type @code{long int}.
28f540f4
RM
2478
2479This function attempts to decompose @var{string} as follows:
2480
2481@itemize @bullet
b8fe19fa 2482@item
28f540f4
RM
2483A (possibly empty) sequence of whitespace characters. Which characters
2484are whitespace is determined by the @code{isspace} function
2485(@pxref{Classification of Characters}). These are discarded.
2486
b8fe19fa 2487@item
28f540f4
RM
2488An optional plus or minus sign (@samp{+} or @samp{-}).
2489
b8fe19fa 2490@item
28f540f4
RM
2491A nonempty sequence of digits in the radix specified by @var{base}.
2492
2493If @var{base} is zero, decimal radix is assumed unless the series of
2494digits begins with @samp{0} (specifying octal radix), or @samp{0x} or
2495@samp{0X} (specifying hexadecimal radix); in other words, the same
2496syntax used for integer constants in C.
2497
600a7457 2498Otherwise @var{base} must have a value between @code{2} and @code{36}.
28f540f4 2499If @var{base} is @code{16}, the digits may optionally be preceded by
2c6fe0bd
UD
2500@samp{0x} or @samp{0X}. If base has no legal value the value returned
2501is @code{0l} and the global variable @code{errno} is set to @code{EINVAL}.
28f540f4 2502
b8fe19fa 2503@item
28f540f4
RM
2504Any remaining characters in the string. If @var{tailptr} is not a null
2505pointer, @code{strtol} stores a pointer to this tail in
2506@code{*@var{tailptr}}.
2507@end itemize
2508
2509If the string is empty, contains only whitespace, or does not contain an
2510initial substring that has the expected syntax for an integer in the
2511specified @var{base}, no conversion is performed. In this case,
2512@code{strtol} returns a value of zero and the value stored in
2513@code{*@var{tailptr}} is the value of @var{string}.
2514
2515In a locale other than the standard @code{"C"} locale, this function
2516may recognize additional implementation-dependent syntax.
2517
2518If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not
2519representable because of overflow, @code{strtol} returns either
2520@code{LONG_MAX} or @code{LONG_MIN} (@pxref{Range of Type}), as
2521appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets @code{errno}
2522to @code{ERANGE} to indicate there was overflow.
2523
7a68c94a
UD
2524You should not check for errors by examining the return value of
2525@code{strtol}, because the string might be a valid representation of
2526@code{0l}, @code{LONG_MAX}, or @code{LONG_MIN}. Instead, check whether
2527@var{tailptr} points to what you expect after the number
2528(e.g. @code{'\0'} if the string should end after the number). You also
2529need to clear @var{errno} before the call and check it afterward, in
2530case there was overflow.
2c6fe0bd 2531
28f540f4
RM
2532There is an example at the end of this section.
2533@end deftypefun
2534
b642f101 2535@deftypefun {long int} wcstol (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2536@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2537@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2538The @code{wcstol} function is equivalent to the @code{strtol} function
2539in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2540
2541The @code{wcstol} function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} of @w{ISO C90}.
2542@end deftypefun
2543
f5c558f3 2544@deftypefun {unsigned long int} strtoul (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2545@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2546@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
28f540f4 2547The @code{strtoul} (``string-to-unsigned-long'') function is like
0e4ee106 2548@code{strtol} except it converts to an @code{unsigned long int} value.
7a68c94a 2549The syntax is the same as described above for @code{strtol}. The value
0e4ee106
UD
2550returned on overflow is @code{ULONG_MAX} (@pxref{Range of Type}).
2551
2552If @var{string} depicts a negative number, @code{strtoul} acts the same
2553as @var{strtol} but casts the result to an unsigned integer. That means
2554for example that @code{strtoul} on @code{"-1"} returns @code{ULONG_MAX}
e6e81391 2555and an input more negative than @code{LONG_MIN} returns
0e4ee106 2556(@code{ULONG_MAX} + 1) / 2.
7a68c94a
UD
2557
2558@code{strtoul} sets @var{errno} to @code{EINVAL} if @var{base} is out of
2559range, or @code{ERANGE} on overflow.
2c6fe0bd
UD
2560@end deftypefun
2561
b642f101 2562@deftypefun {unsigned long int} wcstoul (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2563@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2564@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2565The @code{wcstoul} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoul} function
2566in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2567
2568The @code{wcstoul} function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} of @w{ISO C90}.
2569@end deftypefun
2570
b642f101 2571@deftypefun {long long int} strtoll (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2572@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2573@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2574The @code{strtoll} function is like @code{strtol} except that it returns
2575a @code{long long int} value, and accepts numbers with a correspondingly
2576larger range.
2c6fe0bd
UD
2577
2578If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not
fe7bdd63 2579representable because of overflow, @code{strtoll} returns either
7bb764bc 2580@code{LLONG_MAX} or @code{LLONG_MIN} (@pxref{Range of Type}), as
2c6fe0bd
UD
2581appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets @code{errno} to
2582@code{ERANGE} to indicate there was overflow.
2c6fe0bd 2583
ec751a23 2584The @code{strtoll} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
2c6fe0bd
UD
2585@end deftypefun
2586
b642f101 2587@deftypefun {long long int} wcstoll (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2588@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2589@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2590The @code{wcstoll} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoll} function
2591in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2592
2593The @code{wcstoll} function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} of @w{ISO C90}.
2594@end deftypefun
2595
b642f101 2596@deftypefun {long long int} strtoq (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2597@standards{BSD, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2598@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 2599@code{strtoq} (``string-to-quad-word'') is the BSD name for @code{strtoll}.
2c6fe0bd
UD
2600@end deftypefun
2601
b642f101 2602@deftypefun {long long int} wcstoq (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2603@standards{GNU, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2604@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2605The @code{wcstoq} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoq} function
2606in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2607
2608The @code{wcstoq} function is a GNU extension.
2609@end deftypefun
2610
b642f101 2611@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} strtoull (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2612@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2613@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
0e4ee106
UD
2614The @code{strtoull} function is related to @code{strtoll} the same way
2615@code{strtoul} is related to @code{strtol}.
fe7bdd63 2616
ec751a23 2617The @code{strtoull} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
fe7bdd63
UD
2618@end deftypefun
2619
b642f101 2620@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} wcstoull (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2621@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2622@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2623The @code{wcstoull} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoull} function
2624in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2625
2626The @code{wcstoull} function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} of @w{ISO C90}.
2627@end deftypefun
2628
b642f101 2629@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} strtouq (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2630@standards{BSD, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2631@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a 2632@code{strtouq} is the BSD name for @code{strtoull}.
28f540f4
RM
2633@end deftypefun
2634
b642f101 2635@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} wcstouq (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2636@standards{GNU, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2637@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2638The @code{wcstouq} function is equivalent to the @code{strtouq} function
2639in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101 2640
f5708cb0 2641The @code{wcstouq} function is a GNU extension.
b642f101
UD
2642@end deftypefun
2643
b642f101 2644@deftypefun intmax_t strtoimax (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2645@standards{ISO, inttypes.h}
b719dafd 2646@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
0e4ee106
UD
2647The @code{strtoimax} function is like @code{strtol} except that it returns
2648a @code{intmax_t} value, and accepts numbers of a corresponding range.
2649
2650If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not
2651representable because of overflow, @code{strtoimax} returns either
2652@code{INTMAX_MAX} or @code{INTMAX_MIN} (@pxref{Integers}), as
2653appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets @code{errno} to
2654@code{ERANGE} to indicate there was overflow.
2655
b642f101
UD
2656See @ref{Integers} for a description of the @code{intmax_t} type. The
2657@code{strtoimax} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
2658@end deftypefun
0e4ee106 2659
b642f101 2660@deftypefun intmax_t wcstoimax (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2661@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2662@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2663The @code{wcstoimax} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoimax} function
2664in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
0e4ee106 2665
b642f101 2666The @code{wcstoimax} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
0e4ee106
UD
2667@end deftypefun
2668
b642f101 2669@deftypefun uintmax_t strtoumax (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2670@standards{ISO, inttypes.h}
b719dafd 2671@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
0e4ee106
UD
2672The @code{strtoumax} function is related to @code{strtoimax}
2673the same way that @code{strtoul} is related to @code{strtol}.
2674
b642f101
UD
2675See @ref{Integers} for a description of the @code{intmax_t} type. The
2676@code{strtoumax} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
2677@end deftypefun
0e4ee106 2678
b642f101 2679@deftypefun uintmax_t wcstoumax (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
d08a7e4c 2680@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2681@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3554743a
AJ
2682The @code{wcstoumax} function is equivalent to the @code{strtoumax} function
2683in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2684
2685The @code{wcstoumax} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
0e4ee106
UD
2686@end deftypefun
2687
28f540f4 2688@deftypefun {long int} atol (const char *@var{string})
d08a7e4c 2689@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2690@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
28f540f4
RM
2691This function is similar to the @code{strtol} function with a @var{base}
2692argument of @code{10}, except that it need not detect overflow errors.
2693The @code{atol} function is provided mostly for compatibility with
2694existing code; using @code{strtol} is more robust.
2695@end deftypefun
2696
28f540f4 2697@deftypefun int atoi (const char *@var{string})
d08a7e4c 2698@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2699@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
2700This function is like @code{atol}, except that it returns an @code{int}.
2701The @code{atoi} function is also considered obsolete; use @code{strtol}
2702instead.
28f540f4
RM
2703@end deftypefun
2704
fe7bdd63 2705@deftypefun {long long int} atoll (const char *@var{string})
d08a7e4c 2706@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2707@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
fe7bdd63 2708This function is similar to @code{atol}, except it returns a @code{long
7a68c94a 2709long int}.
fe7bdd63 2710
ec751a23 2711The @code{atoll} function was introduced in @w{ISO C99}. It too is
7a68c94a 2712obsolete (despite having just been added); use @code{strtoll} instead.
fe7bdd63
UD
2713@end deftypefun
2714
b642f101
UD
2715All the functions mentioned in this section so far do not handle
2716alternative representations of characters as described in the locale
2717data. Some locales specify thousands separator and the way they have to
2718be used which can help to make large numbers more readable. To read
2719such numbers one has to use the @code{scanf} functions with the @samp{'}
2720flag.
2c6fe0bd 2721
28f540f4
RM
2722Here is a function which parses a string as a sequence of integers and
2723returns the sum of them:
2724
2725@smallexample
2726int
2727sum_ints_from_string (char *string)
2728@{
2729 int sum = 0;
2730
2731 while (1) @{
2732 char *tail;
2733 int next;
2734
2735 /* @r{Skip whitespace by hand, to detect the end.} */
2736 while (isspace (*string)) string++;
2737 if (*string == 0)
2738 break;
2739
2740 /* @r{There is more nonwhitespace,} */
2741 /* @r{so it ought to be another number.} */
2742 errno = 0;
2743 /* @r{Parse it.} */
2744 next = strtol (string, &tail, 0);
2745 /* @r{Add it in, if not overflow.} */
2746 if (errno)
2747 printf ("Overflow\n");
2748 else
2749 sum += next;
2750 /* @r{Advance past it.} */
2751 string = tail;
2752 @}
2753
2754 return sum;
2755@}
2756@end smallexample
2757
2758@node Parsing of Floats
2759@subsection Parsing of Floats
2760
2761@pindex stdlib.h
b642f101
UD
2762The @samp{str} functions are declared in @file{stdlib.h} and those
2763beginning with @samp{wcs} are declared in @file{wchar.h}. One might
2764wonder about the use of @code{restrict} in the prototypes of the
2765functions in this section. It is seemingly useless but the @w{ISO C}
2766standard uses it (for the functions defined there) so we have to do it
2767as well.
28f540f4 2768
b642f101 2769@deftypefun double strtod (const char *restrict @var{string}, char **restrict @var{tailptr})
d08a7e4c 2770@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd
AO
2771@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2772@c Besides the unsafe-but-ruled-safe locale uses, this uses a lot of
2773@c mpn, but it's all safe.
2774@c
2775@c round_and_return
2776@c get_rounding_mode ok
2777@c mpn_add_1 ok
2778@c mpn_rshift ok
2779@c MPN_ZERO ok
2780@c MPN2FLOAT -> mpn_construct_(float|double|long_double) ok
2781@c str_to_mpn
2782@c mpn_mul_1 -> umul_ppmm ok
2783@c mpn_add_1 ok
2784@c mpn_lshift_1 -> mpn_lshift ok
2785@c STRTOF_INTERNAL
2786@c MPN_VAR ok
9761bf4d 2787@c SET_NAN_PAYLOAD ok
b719dafd
AO
2788@c STRNCASECMP ok, wide and narrow
2789@c round_and_return ok
2790@c mpn_mul ok
2791@c mpn_addmul_1 ok
2792@c ... mpn_sub
2793@c mpn_lshift ok
2794@c udiv_qrnnd ok
2795@c count_leading_zeros ok
2796@c add_ssaaaa ok
2797@c sub_ddmmss ok
2798@c umul_ppmm ok
2799@c mpn_submul_1 ok
28f540f4
RM
2800The @code{strtod} (``string-to-double'') function converts the initial
2801part of @var{string} to a floating-point number, which is returned as a
b8fe19fa 2802value of type @code{double}.
28f540f4
RM
2803
2804This function attempts to decompose @var{string} as follows:
2805
2806@itemize @bullet
b8fe19fa 2807@item
28f540f4
RM
2808A (possibly empty) sequence of whitespace characters. Which characters
2809are whitespace is determined by the @code{isspace} function
2810(@pxref{Classification of Characters}). These are discarded.
2811
2812@item
2813An optional plus or minus sign (@samp{+} or @samp{-}).
2814
0c34b1e9
UD
2815@item A floating point number in decimal or hexadecimal format. The
2816decimal format is:
2817@itemize @minus
2818
28f540f4
RM
2819@item
2820A nonempty sequence of digits optionally containing a decimal-point
2821character---normally @samp{.}, but it depends on the locale
85c165be 2822(@pxref{General Numeric}).
28f540f4
RM
2823
2824@item
2825An optional exponent part, consisting of a character @samp{e} or
2826@samp{E}, an optional sign, and a sequence of digits.
2827
0c34b1e9
UD
2828@end itemize
2829
2830The hexadecimal format is as follows:
2831@itemize @minus
2832
2833@item
2834A 0x or 0X followed by a nonempty sequence of hexadecimal digits
2835optionally containing a decimal-point character---normally @samp{.}, but
2836it depends on the locale (@pxref{General Numeric}).
2837
2838@item
2839An optional binary-exponent part, consisting of a character @samp{p} or
2840@samp{P}, an optional sign, and a sequence of digits.
2841
2842@end itemize
2843
28f540f4
RM
2844@item
2845Any remaining characters in the string. If @var{tailptr} is not a null
2846pointer, a pointer to this tail of the string is stored in
2847@code{*@var{tailptr}}.
2848@end itemize
2849
2850If the string is empty, contains only whitespace, or does not contain an
2851initial substring that has the expected syntax for a floating-point
2852number, no conversion is performed. In this case, @code{strtod} returns
2853a value of zero and the value returned in @code{*@var{tailptr}} is the
2854value of @var{string}.
2855
26761c28 2856In a locale other than the standard @code{"C"} or @code{"POSIX"} locales,
2c6fe0bd 2857this function may recognize additional locale-dependent syntax.
28f540f4
RM
2858
2859If the string has valid syntax for a floating-point number but the value
7a68c94a
UD
2860is outside the range of a @code{double}, @code{strtod} will signal
2861overflow or underflow as described in @ref{Math Error Reporting}.
2862
2863@code{strtod} recognizes four special input strings. The strings
2864@code{"inf"} and @code{"infinity"} are converted to @math{@infinity{}},
2865or to the largest representable value if the floating-point format
2866doesn't support infinities. You can prepend a @code{"+"} or @code{"-"}
2867to specify the sign. Case is ignored when scanning these strings.
2868
95fdc6a0
UD
2869The strings @code{"nan"} and @code{"nan(@var{chars@dots{}})"} are converted
2870to NaN. Again, case is ignored. If @var{chars@dots{}} are provided, they
7a68c94a
UD
2871are used in some unspecified fashion to select a particular
2872representation of NaN (there can be several).
2873
2874Since zero is a valid result as well as the value returned on error, you
2875should check for errors in the same way as for @code{strtol}, by
2876examining @var{errno} and @var{tailptr}.
28f540f4
RM
2877@end deftypefun
2878
2c6fe0bd 2879@deftypefun float strtof (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr})
7a68c94a 2880@deftypefunx {long double} strtold (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr})
d08a7e4c 2881@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2882@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7d641c41 2883@comment See safety comments for strtod.
7a68c94a
UD
2884These functions are analogous to @code{strtod}, but return @code{float}
2885and @code{long double} values respectively. They report errors in the
2886same way as @code{strtod}. @code{strtof} can be substantially faster
2887than @code{strtod}, but has less precision; conversely, @code{strtold}
2888can be much slower but has more precision (on systems where @code{long
2889double} is a separate type).
2890
ec751a23 2891These functions have been GNU extensions and are new to @w{ISO C99}.
2c6fe0bd
UD
2892@end deftypefun
2893
7d641c41 2894@deftypefun _FloatN strtofN (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr})
7d641c41 2895@deftypefunx _FloatNx strtofNx (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr})
d08a7e4c 2896@standards{ISO/IEC TS 18661-3, stdlib.h}
7d641c41
GG
2897@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2898@comment See safety comments for strtod.
2899These functions are like @code{strtod}, except for the return type.
2900
2901They were introduced in @w{ISO/IEC TS 18661-3} and are available on machines
2902that support the related types; @pxref{Mathematics}.
2903@end deftypefun
2904
b642f101 2905@deftypefun double wcstod (const wchar_t *restrict @var{string}, wchar_t **restrict @var{tailptr})
b642f101 2906@deftypefunx float wcstof (const wchar_t *@var{string}, wchar_t **@var{tailptr})
b642f101 2907@deftypefunx {long double} wcstold (const wchar_t *@var{string}, wchar_t **@var{tailptr})
7d641c41 2908@deftypefunx _FloatN wcstofN (const wchar_t *@var{string}, wchar_t **@var{tailptr})
7d641c41 2909@deftypefunx _FloatNx wcstofNx (const wchar_t *@var{string}, wchar_t **@var{tailptr})
d08a7e4c
RJ
2910@standards{ISO, wchar.h}
2911@standardsx{wcstofN, GNU, wchar.h}
2912@standardsx{wcstofNx, GNU, wchar.h}
b719dafd 2913@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7d641c41
GG
2914@comment See safety comments for strtod.
2915The @code{wcstod}, @code{wcstof}, @code{wcstol}, @code{wcstof@var{N}},
2916and @code{wcstof@var{N}x} functions are equivalent in nearly all aspects
2917to the @code{strtod}, @code{strtof}, @code{strtold},
2918@code{strtof@var{N}}, and @code{strtof@var{N}x} functions, but they
2919handle wide character strings.
b642f101
UD
2920
2921The @code{wcstod} function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} of @w{ISO
2922C90}. The @code{wcstof} and @code{wcstold} functions were introduced in
2923@w{ISO C99}.
7d641c41
GG
2924
2925The @code{wcstof@var{N}} and @code{wcstof@var{N}x} functions are not in
2926any standard, but are added to provide completeness for the
2927non-deprecated interface of wide character string to floating-point
2928conversion functions. They are only available on machines that support
2929the related types; @pxref{Mathematics}.
b642f101
UD
2930@end deftypefun
2931
28f540f4 2932@deftypefun double atof (const char *@var{string})
d08a7e4c 2933@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 2934@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
28f540f4
RM
2935This function is similar to the @code{strtod} function, except that it
2936need not detect overflow and underflow errors. The @code{atof} function
2937is provided mostly for compatibility with existing code; using
2938@code{strtod} is more robust.
2939@end deftypefun
880f421f 2940
1f77f049 2941@Theglibc{} also provides @samp{_l} versions of these functions,
7a68c94a 2942which take an additional argument, the locale to use in conversion.
aa04af00
AM
2943
2944See also @ref{Parsing of Integers}.
880f421f 2945
6962682f
GG
2946@node Printing of Floats
2947@section Printing of Floats
2948
2949@pindex stdlib.h
2950The @samp{strfrom} functions are declared in @file{stdlib.h}.
2951
6962682f
GG
2952@deftypefun int strfromd (char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size}, const char *restrict @var{format}, double @var{value})
2953@deftypefunx int strfromf (char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size}, const char *restrict @var{format}, float @var{value})
2954@deftypefunx int strfroml (char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size}, const char *restrict @var{format}, long double @var{value})
d08a7e4c 2955@standards{ISO/IEC TS 18661-1, stdlib.h}
6962682f 2956@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
7d641c41
GG
2957@comment All these functions depend on both __printf_fp and __printf_fphex,
2958@comment which are both AS-unsafe (ascuheap) and AC-unsafe (acsmem).
6962682f
GG
2959The functions @code{strfromd} (``string-from-double''), @code{strfromf}
2960(``string-from-float''), and @code{strfroml} (``string-from-long-double'')
2961convert the floating-point number @var{value} to a string of characters and
2962stores them into the area pointed to by @var{string}. The conversion
2963writes at most @var{size} characters and respects the format specified by
2964@var{format}.
2965
2966The format string must start with the character @samp{%}. An optional
2967precision follows, which starts with a period, @samp{.}, and may be
2968followed by a decimal integer, representing the precision. If a decimal
2969integer is not specified after the period, the precision is taken to be
2970zero. The character @samp{*} is not allowed. Finally, the format string
2971ends with one of the following conversion specifiers: @samp{a}, @samp{A},
2972@samp{e}, @samp{E}, @samp{f}, @samp{F}, @samp{g} or @samp{G} (@pxref{Table
2973of Output Conversions}). Invalid format strings result in undefined
2974behavior.
2975
2976These functions return the number of characters that would have been
2977written to @var{string} had @var{size} been sufficiently large, not
2978counting the terminating null character. Thus, the null-terminated output
2979has been completely written if and only if the returned value is less than
2980@var{size}.
2981
2982These functions were introduced by ISO/IEC TS 18661-1.
2983@end deftypefun
2984
7d641c41 2985@deftypefun int strfromfN (char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size}, const char *restrict @var{format}, _Float@var{N} @var{value})
7d641c41 2986@deftypefunx int strfromfNx (char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size}, const char *restrict @var{format}, _Float@var{N}x @var{value})
d08a7e4c 2987@standards{ISO/IEC TS 18661-3, stdlib.h}
7d641c41
GG
2988@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2989@comment See safety comments for strfromd.
2990These functions are like @code{strfromd}, except for the type of
2991@code{value}.
2992
2993They were introduced in @w{ISO/IEC TS 18661-3} and are available on machines
2994that support the related types; @pxref{Mathematics}.
2995@end deftypefun
2996
7a68c94a
UD
2997@node System V Number Conversion
2998@section Old-fashioned System V number-to-string functions
880f421f 2999
7a68c94a 3000The old @w{System V} C library provided three functions to convert
1f77f049
JM
3001numbers to strings, with unusual and hard-to-use semantics. @Theglibc{}
3002also provides these functions and some natural extensions.
880f421f 3003
1f77f049 3004These functions are only available in @theglibc{} and on systems descended
7a68c94a
UD
3005from AT&T Unix. Therefore, unless these functions do precisely what you
3006need, it is better to use @code{sprintf}, which is standard.
880f421f 3007
7a68c94a 3008All these functions are defined in @file{stdlib.h}.
880f421f 3009
7a68c94a 3010@deftypefun {char *} ecvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg})
d08a7e4c
RJ
3011@standards{SVID, stdlib.h}
3012@standards{Unix98, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3013@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:ecvt}}@asunsafe{}@acsafe{}}
880f421f 3014The function @code{ecvt} converts the floating-point number @var{value}
0ea5db4f 3015to a string with at most @var{ndigit} decimal digits. The
cf822e3c 3016returned string contains no decimal point or sign. The first digit of
0ea5db4f
UD
3017the string is non-zero (unless @var{value} is actually zero) and the
3018last digit is rounded to nearest. @code{*@var{decpt}} is set to the
7a68c94a 3019index in the string of the first digit after the decimal point.
0ea5db4f
UD
3020@code{*@var{neg}} is set to a nonzero value if @var{value} is negative,
3021zero otherwise.
880f421f 3022
67994d6f
UD
3023If @var{ndigit} decimal digits would exceed the precision of a
3024@code{double} it is reduced to a system-specific value.
3025
880f421f
UD
3026The returned string is statically allocated and overwritten by each call
3027to @code{ecvt}.
3028
0ea5db4f
UD
3029If @var{value} is zero, it is implementation defined whether
3030@code{*@var{decpt}} is @code{0} or @code{1}.
880f421f 3031
0ea5db4f
UD
3032For example: @code{ecvt (12.3, 5, &d, &n)} returns @code{"12300"}
3033and sets @var{d} to @code{2} and @var{n} to @code{0}.
880f421f
UD
3034@end deftypefun
3035
0ea5db4f 3036@deftypefun {char *} fcvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg})
d08a7e4c
RJ
3037@standards{SVID, stdlib.h}
3038@standards{Unix98, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3039@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:fcvt}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
7a68c94a
UD
3040The function @code{fcvt} is like @code{ecvt}, but @var{ndigit} specifies
3041the number of digits after the decimal point. If @var{ndigit} is less
3042than zero, @var{value} is rounded to the @math{@var{ndigit}+1}'th place to the
3043left of the decimal point. For example, if @var{ndigit} is @code{-1},
3044@var{value} will be rounded to the nearest 10. If @var{ndigit} is
3045negative and larger than the number of digits to the left of the decimal
3046point in @var{value}, @var{value} will be rounded to one significant digit.
880f421f 3047
67994d6f
UD
3048If @var{ndigit} decimal digits would exceed the precision of a
3049@code{double} it is reduced to a system-specific value.
3050
880f421f
UD
3051The returned string is statically allocated and overwritten by each call
3052to @code{fcvt}.
880f421f
UD
3053@end deftypefun
3054
880f421f 3055@deftypefun {char *} gcvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, char *@var{buf})
d08a7e4c
RJ
3056@standards{SVID, stdlib.h}
3057@standards{Unix98, stdlib.h}
b719dafd
AO
3058@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
3059@c gcvt calls sprintf, that ultimately calls vfprintf, which malloc()s
3060@c args_value if it's too large, but gcvt never exercises this path.
7a68c94a
UD
3061@code{gcvt} is functionally equivalent to @samp{sprintf(buf, "%*g",
3062ndigit, value}. It is provided only for compatibility's sake. It
3063returns @var{buf}.
67994d6f
UD
3064
3065If @var{ndigit} decimal digits would exceed the precision of a
3066@code{double} it is reduced to a system-specific value.
880f421f
UD
3067@end deftypefun
3068
1f77f049 3069As extensions, @theglibc{} provides versions of these three
7a68c94a 3070functions that take @code{long double} arguments.
880f421f 3071
7a68c94a 3072@deftypefun {char *} qecvt (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg})
d08a7e4c 3073@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3074@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:qecvt}}@asunsafe{}@acsafe{}}
67994d6f
UD
3075This function is equivalent to @code{ecvt} except that it takes a
3076@code{long double} for the first parameter and that @var{ndigit} is
3077restricted by the precision of a @code{long double}.
880f421f
UD
3078@end deftypefun
3079
0ea5db4f 3080@deftypefun {char *} qfcvt (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg})
d08a7e4c 3081@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3082@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:qfcvt}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
7a68c94a 3083This function is equivalent to @code{fcvt} except that it
67994d6f
UD
3084takes a @code{long double} for the first parameter and that @var{ndigit} is
3085restricted by the precision of a @code{long double}.
880f421f
UD
3086@end deftypefun
3087
880f421f 3088@deftypefun {char *} qgcvt (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, char *@var{buf})
d08a7e4c 3089@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3090@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
67994d6f
UD
3091This function is equivalent to @code{gcvt} except that it takes a
3092@code{long double} for the first parameter and that @var{ndigit} is
3093restricted by the precision of a @code{long double}.
880f421f
UD
3094@end deftypefun
3095
3096
3097@cindex gcvt_r
7a68c94a
UD
3098The @code{ecvt} and @code{fcvt} functions, and their @code{long double}
3099equivalents, all return a string located in a static buffer which is
1f77f049 3100overwritten by the next call to the function. @Theglibc{}
7a68c94a
UD
3101provides another set of extended functions which write the converted
3102string into a user-supplied buffer. These have the conventional
3103@code{_r} suffix.
3104
3105@code{gcvt_r} is not necessary, because @code{gcvt} already uses a
3106user-supplied buffer.
880f421f 3107
5c1c368f 3108@deftypefun int ecvt_r (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len})
d08a7e4c 3109@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3110@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
3111The @code{ecvt_r} function is the same as @code{ecvt}, except
3112that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by
5c1c368f
UD
3113@var{buf}, with length @var{len}. The return value is @code{-1} in
3114case of an error and zero otherwise.
880f421f 3115
7a68c94a 3116This function is a GNU extension.
880f421f
UD
3117@end deftypefun
3118
5c1c368f 3119@deftypefun int fcvt_r (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len})
d08a7e4c
RJ
3120@standards{SVID, stdlib.h}
3121@standards{Unix98, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3122@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
5c1c368f
UD
3123The @code{fcvt_r} function is the same as @code{fcvt}, except that it
3124places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by
3125@var{buf}, with length @var{len}. The return value is @code{-1} in
3126case of an error and zero otherwise.
880f421f 3127
7a68c94a 3128This function is a GNU extension.
880f421f
UD
3129@end deftypefun
3130
5c1c368f 3131@deftypefun int qecvt_r (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len})
d08a7e4c 3132@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3133@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
3134The @code{qecvt_r} function is the same as @code{qecvt}, except
3135that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by
5c1c368f
UD
3136@var{buf}, with length @var{len}. The return value is @code{-1} in
3137case of an error and zero otherwise.
880f421f 3138
7a68c94a 3139This function is a GNU extension.
880f421f
UD
3140@end deftypefun
3141
5c1c368f 3142@deftypefun int qfcvt_r (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len})
d08a7e4c 3143@standards{GNU, stdlib.h}
b719dafd 3144@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
7a68c94a
UD
3145The @code{qfcvt_r} function is the same as @code{qfcvt}, except
3146that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by
5c1c368f
UD
3147@var{buf}, with length @var{len}. The return value is @code{-1} in
3148case of an error and zero otherwise.
880f421f 3149
7a68c94a 3150This function is a GNU extension.
880f421f 3151@end deftypefun