feclearexcept, fegetexceptflag, feraiseexcept, fesetexceptflag, fetestexcept, fegetenv, fegetround, feholdexcept, fesetround, fesetenv, feupdateenv, feenableexcept, fedisableexcept, fegetexcept — floating-point rounding and exception handling
#include <fenv.h>
| int
            feclearexcept( | int excepts ); | 
| int
            fegetexceptflag( | fexcept_t *flagp, | 
| int excepts ); | 
| int
            feraiseexcept( | int excepts ); | 
| int
            fesetexceptflag( | const fexcept_t *flagp, | 
| int excepts ); | 
| int
            fetestexcept( | int excepts ); | 
| int
            fegetround( | void); | 
| int
            fesetround( | int rounding_mode ); | 
| int
            fegetenv( | fenv_t *envp ); | 
| int
            feholdexcept( | fenv_t *envp ); | 
| int
            fesetenv( | const fenv_t *envp ); | 
| int
            feupdateenv( | const fenv_t *envp ); | 
| ![[Note]](../stylesheet/note.png) | Note | 
|---|---|
| Link with  | 
These eleven functions were defined in C99, and describe the handling of floating-point rounding and exceptions (overflow, zero-divide etc.).
The divide-by-zero exception
        occurs when an operation on finite numbers produces
        infinity as exact answer.
The overflow exception
        occurs when a result has to be represented as a
        floating-point number, but has (much) larger absolute value
        than the largest (finite) floating-point number that is
        representable.
The underflow exception
        occurs when a result has to be represented as a
        floating-point number, but has smaller absolute value than
        the smallest positive normalized floating-point number (and
        would lose much accuracy when represented as a denormalized
        number).
The inexact
        exception occurs when the rounded result of an operation is
        not equal to the infinite precision result. It may occur
        whenever overflow or
        underflow occurs.
The invalid exception
        occurs when there is no well-defined result for an
        operation, as for 0/0 or infinity − infinity or
        sqrt(−1).
Exceptions are represented in two ways: as a single bit (exception present/absent), and these bits correspond in some implementation-defined way with bit positions in an integer, and also as an opaque structure that may contain more information about the exception (perhaps the code address where it occurred).
Each of the macros FE_DIVBYZERO, FE_INEXACT, FE_INVALID, FE_OVERFLOW, FE_UNDERFLOW is defined when the
        implementation supports handling of the corresponding
        exception, and if so then defines the corresponding bit(s),
        so that one can call exception handling functions, for
        example, using the integer argument FE_OVERFLOW|FE_UNDERFLOW. Other exceptions may be
        supported. The macro FE_ALL_EXCEPT is the bitwise OR of all
        bits corresponding to supported exceptions.
The feclearexcept()
        function clears the supported exceptions represented by the
        bits in its argument.
The fegetexceptflag()
        function stores a representation of the state of the
        exception flags represented by the argument excepts in the opaque object
        *flagp.
The feraiseexcept()
        function raises the supported exceptions represented by the
        bits in excepts.
The fesetexceptflag()
        function sets the complete status for the exceptions
        represented by excepts to the value
        *flagp. This value
        must have been obtained by an earlier call of fegetexceptflag() with a last argument
        that contained all bits in excepts.
The fetestexcept()
        function returns a word in which the bits are set that were
        set in the argument excepts and for which the
        corresponding exception is currently set.
The rounding mode determines how the result of floating-point operations is treated when the result cannot be exactly represented in the significand. Various rounding modes may be provided: round to nearest (the default), round up (toward positive infinity), round down (toward negative infinity), and round toward zero.
Each of the macros FE_TONEAREST, FE_UPWARD, FE_DOWNWARD, and FE_TOWARDZERO is defined when the
        implementation supports getting and setting the
        corresponding rounding direction.
The fegetround() function
        returns the macro corresponding to the current rounding
        mode.
The fesetround() function
        sets the rounding mode as specified by its argument and
        returns zero when it was successful.
C99 and POSIX.1-2008 specify an identifier, FLT_ROUNDS, defined in <float.h>
        which indicates the implementation-defined rounding
        behavior for floating-point addition. This identifier has
        one of the following values:
The rounding mode is not determinable.
0Rounding is toward 0.
1Rounding is toward nearest number.
2Rounding is toward positive infinity.
3Rounding is toward negative infinity.
Other values represent machine-dependent, nonstandard rounding modes.
The value of FLT_ROUNDS
        should reflect the current rounding mode as set by
        fesetround() (but see
        BUGS).
The entire floating-point environment, including control
        modes and status flags, can be handled as one opaque
        object, of type fenv_t. The
        default environment is denoted by FE_DFL_ENV (of type const fenv_t *). This is the environment
        setup at program start and it is defined by ISO C to have
        round to nearest, all exceptions cleared and a nonstop
        (continue on exceptions) mode.
The fegetenv() function
        saves the current floating-point environment in the object
        *envp.
The feholdexcept()
        function does the same, then clears all exception flags,
        and sets a nonstop (continue on exceptions) mode, if
        available. It returns zero when successful.
The fesetenv() function
        restores the floating-point environment from the object
        *envp. This object
        must be known to be valid, for example, the result of a
        call to fegetenv() or
        feholdexcept() or equal to
        FE_DFL_ENV. This call does
        not raise exceptions.
The feupdateenv() function
        installs the floating-point environment represented by the
        object *envp,
        except that currently raised exceptions are not cleared.
        After calling this function, the raised exceptions will be
        a bitwise OR of those previously set with those in
        *envp. As before,
        the object *envp
        must be known to be valid.
If possible, the GNU C Library defines a macro
        FE_NOMASK_ENV which
        represents an environment where every exception raised
        causes a trap to occur. You can test for this macro using
        #ifdef. It is only defined if
        _GNU_SOURCE is defined. The
        C99 standard does not define a way to set individual bits
        in the floating-point mask, for example, to trap on
        specific flags. Since version 2.2, glibc supports the
        functions feenableexcept()
        and fedisableexcept() to set
        individual floating-point traps, and fegetexcept() to query the state.
#define _GNU_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */ #include <fenv.h>int feenableexcept(int excepts);int fedisableexcept(int excepts); int fegetexcept(void);
The feenableexcept() and
        fedisableexcept() functions
        enable (disable) traps for each of the exceptions
        represented by excepts and return the
        previous set of enabled exceptions when successful, and
        −1 otherwise. The fegetexcept() function returns the set of
        all currently enabled exceptions.
C99 specifies that the value of FLT_ROUNDS should reflect changes to the
      current rounding mode, as set by fesetround(). Currently, this does not
      occur: FLT_ROUNDS always has
      the value 1.
This page is part of release 3.33 of the Linux man-pages project. A
      description of the project, and information about reporting
      bugs, can be found at http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/.
| Copyright (c) 2000 Andries Brouwer (aebcwi.nl) This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU General Public License's references to "object code" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any document formatting or typesetting system, including intermediate and printed output. This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this manual; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA. 2000-08-14 added GNU additions from Andreas Jaeger 2000-12-05 some changes inspired by acahalan's remarks |