isgreater, isgreaterequal, isless, islessequal, islessgreater, isunordered — floating-point relational tests without exception for NaN
#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) ; |
Note | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Note | |
---|---|
Link with |
The normal relation operations (like <
, "less than") 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 operands
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
()determines whether its arguments are unordered, that is, whether at least one of the arguments is a NaN.
The macros other than isunordered
() return the result of the
relational comparison; these macros return 0 if either
argument is a NaN.
isunordered
() returns 1 if
x
or y
is NaN and 0 otherwise.
Not all hardware supports these functions, and where hardware support isn't provided, they will be emulated by macros. This will result in a performance penalty. Don't use these functions if NaN is of no concern for you.
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 2002 Walter Harms (walter.harmsinformatik.uni-oldenburg.de) Distributed under GPL 2002-07-27 Walter Harms this was done with the help of the glibc manual |