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These functions are provided for obtaining the absolute value (or
magnitude) of a number. The absolute value of a real number
x is x if x is positive, -x if x is
negative. For a complex number z, whose real part is x and
whose imaginary part is y, the absolute value is sqrt (x*x + y*y).
Prototypes for abs, labs and llabs are in stdlib.h;
imaxabs is declared in inttypes.h;
fabs, fabsf and fabsl are declared in math.h.
cabs, cabsf and cabsl are declared in complex.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
These functions return the absolute value of number.
Most computers use a two’s complement integer representation, in which
the absolute value of INT_MIN (the smallest possible int)
cannot be represented; thus, abs (INT_MIN) is not defined.
llabs and imaxdiv are new to ISO C99.
See Integers for a description of the intmax_t type.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function returns the absolute value of the floating-point number number.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
These functions return the absolute value of the complex number z (see Complex Numbers). The absolute value of a complex number is:
sqrt (creal (z) * creal (z) + cimag (z) * cimag (z))
This function should always be used instead of the direct formula
because it takes special care to avoid losing precision. It may also
take advantage of hardware support for this operation. See hypot
in Exponents and Logarithms.
Next: Normalization Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions [Contents][Index]