gentype
fmax
(
| gentype x, |
gentype y) |
gentypef
fmax
(
| gentypef x, |
float y) |
gentyped
fmax
(
| gentyped x, |
double y) |
gentype fmax (gentype x ,
half y ) // if half extension enabled
|
Returns y
if x
is less than y
,
otherwise it returns x
. If one argument is a NaN,
fmax()
returns the other argument. If both arguments are NaNs,
fmax()
returns a NaN.
fmin and
fmax
behave as defined by C99 and may not match the IEEE 754-2008
definition for minNum
and maxNum
with regard
to signaling NaNs. Specifically, signaling NaNs may behave as quiet NaNs.
The built-in math functions are categorized into the following:
The vector versions of the math functions operate component-wise. The description is per-component.
The built-in math functions are not affected by the prevailing rounding mode in the calling environment, and always return the same value as they would if called with the round to nearest even rounding mode.
The built-in math functions take scalar or vector arguments. For any specific use of these function, the actual type has to be the same for all arguments and the return type unless otherwise specified.
The generic type name gentype is used to indicate that the function can take float, float2, float3, float4, float8, float16, double, double2, double3, double4, double8, or double16 as the type for the arguments.
If extended with cl_khr_fp16, generic type name gentype may indicate half and half{2|3|4|8|16} as arguments and return values.
The generic type name gentypef is used to indicate that the function can take float, float2, float3, float4, float8, or float16 as the type for the arguments.
The generic type name gentyped is used to indicate that the function can take double, double2, double3, double4, double8, or double16 as the type for the arguments.