Rechercher une page de manuel
isgreater
Langue: en
Version: 2002-07-27 (fedora - 16/08/07)
Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)
NAME
isgreater, isgreaterequal, isless, islessgreater, isunordered - macros to test a relationSYNOPSIS
#include <math.h> int isgreater(x,y); int isgreaterequal(x,y); int isless(x,y); int islessequal(x,y); int islessgreater(x,y); int isunordered(x,y);
Compile with -std=c99; link with -lm.
DESCRIPTION
The normal relation operations (like less) will fail if one of the operands is NaN. This will cause an exception. To avoid this, C99 defines these macros. The macros are guaranteed to evaluate their operands only once. The operand can be of any real floating-point type.- isgreater()
- determines (x) > (y) without an exception if x or y is NaN.
- isgreaterequal()
- determines (x) >= (y) without an exception if x or y is NaN.
- isless()
- determines (x) < (y) without an exception if x or y is NaN.
- islessequal()
- determines (x) <= (y) without an exception if x or y is NaN.
- islessgreater()
- determines (x) < (y) || (x) > (y) without an exception if x or y is NaN. This macro is not equivalent to x != y because that expression is true if x or y is NaN.
- isunordered()
- is true if x or y is NaN and false otherwise.
NOTE
Not all hardware supports these functions, and where it doesn't, they will be emulated by macros. This will give you a performance penalty. Don't use these functions if NaN is of no concern for you.CONFORMING TO
C99SEE ALSO
fpclassify(3), isnan(3)Contenus ©2006-2024 Benjamin Poulain
Design ©2006-2024 Maxime Vantorre