diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/msun/man/math.3')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/msun/man/math.3 | 633 |
1 files changed, 633 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/lib/msun/man/math.3 b/lib/msun/man/math.3 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b49a510 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/msun/man/math.3 @@ -0,0 +1,633 @@ +.\" Copyright (c) 1985 Regents of the University of California. +.\" All rights reserved. +.\" +.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions +.\" are met: +.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright +.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. +.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright +.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the +.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. +.\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software +.\" must display the following acknowledgement: +.\" This product includes software developed by the University of +.\" California, Berkeley and its contributors. +.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors +.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software +.\" without specific prior written permission. +.\" +.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND +.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE +.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE +.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE +.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL +.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS +.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) +.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT +.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY +.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF +.\" SUCH DAMAGE. +.\" +.\" from: @(#)math.3 6.10 (Berkeley) 5/6/91 +.\" $Id: math.3,v 1.4 1994/02/25 19:43:56 jtc Exp $ +.\" +.TH MATH 3M "May 6, 1991" +.UC 4 +.ds up \fIulp\fR +.ds nn \fINaN\fR +.de If +.if n \\ +\\$1Infinity\\$2 +.if t \\ +\\$1\\(if\\$2 +.. +.SH NAME +math \- introduction to mathematical library functions +.SH DESCRIPTION +These functions constitute the C math library, +.I libm. +The link editor searches this library under the \*(lq\-lm\*(rq option. +Declarations for these functions may be obtained from the include file +.RI < math.h >. +The Fortran math library is described in ``man 3f intro''. +.SH "LIST OF FUNCTIONS" +.sp 2 +.nf +.ta \w'copysign'u+2n +\w'infnan.3m'u+10n +\w'inverse trigonometric func'u +\fIName\fP \fIAppears on Page\fP \fIDescription\fP \fIError Bound (ULPs)\fP +.ta \w'copysign'u+4n +\w'infnan.3m'u+4n +\w'inverse trigonometric function'u+6nC +.sp 5p +acos sin.3m inverse trigonometric function 3 +acosh asinh.3m inverse hyperbolic function 3 +asin sin.3m inverse trigonometric function 3 +asinh asinh.3m inverse hyperbolic function 3 +atan sin.3m inverse trigonometric function 1 +atanh asinh.3m inverse hyperbolic function 3 +atan2 sin.3m inverse trigonometric function 2 +cabs hypot.3m complex absolute value 1 +cbrt sqrt.3m cube root 1 +ceil floor.3m integer no less than 0 +copysign ieee.3m copy sign bit 0 +cos sin.3m trigonometric function 1 +cosh sinh.3m hyperbolic function 3 +erf erf.3m error function ??? +erfc erf.3m complementary error function ??? +exp exp.3m exponential 1 +expm1 exp.3m exp(x)\-1 1 +fabs floor.3m absolute value 0 +floor floor.3m integer no greater than 0 +hypot hypot.3m Euclidean distance 1 +ilogb ieee.3m exponent extraction 0 +infnan infnan.3m signals exceptions +j0 j0.3m bessel function ??? +j1 j0.3m bessel function ??? +jn j0.3m bessel function ??? +lgamma lgamma.3m log gamma function; (formerly gamma.3m) +log exp.3m natural logarithm 1 +log10 exp.3m logarithm to base 10 3 +log1p exp.3m log(1+x) 1 +pow exp.3m exponential x**y 60\-500 +remainder ieee.3m remainder 0 +rint floor.3m round to nearest integer 0 +scalbn ieee.3m exponent adjustment 0 +sin sin.3m trigonometric function 1 +sinh sinh.3m hyperbolic function 3 +sqrt sqrt.3m square root 1 +tan sin.3m trigonometric function 3 +tanh sinh.3m hyperbolic function 3 +y0 j0.3m bessel function ??? +y1 j0.3m bessel function ??? +yn j0.3m bessel function ??? +.ta +.fi +.SH NOTES +In 4.3 BSD, distributed from the University of California +in late 1985, most of the foregoing functions come in two +versions, one for the double\-precision "D" format in the +DEC VAX\-11 family of computers, another for double\-precision +arithmetic conforming to the IEEE Standard 754 for Binary +Floating\-Point Arithmetic. The two versions behave very +similarly, as should be expected from programs more accurate +and robust than was the norm when UNIX was born. For +instance, the programs are accurate to within the numbers +of \*(ups tabulated above; an \*(up is one \fIU\fRnit in the \fIL\fRast +\fIP\fRlace. And the programs have been cured of anomalies that +afflicted the older math library \fIlibm\fR in which incidents like +the following had been reported: +.RS +sqrt(\-1.0) = 0.0 and log(\-1.0) = \-1.7e38. +.br +cos(1.0e\-11) > cos(0.0) > 1.0. +.br +pow(x,1.0) +.if n \ +!= +.if t \ +\(!= +x when x = 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ..., 9.0. +.br +pow(\-1.0,1.0e10) trapped on Integer Overflow. +.br +sqrt(1.0e30) and sqrt(1.0e\-30) were very slow. +.RE +However the two versions do differ in ways that have to be +explained, to which end the following notes are provided. +.PP +\fBDEC VAX\-11 D_floating\-point:\fR +.PP +This is the format for which the original math library \fIlibm\fR +was developed, and to which this manual is still principally +dedicated. It is \fIthe\fR double\-precision format for the PDP\-11 +and the earlier VAX\-11 machines; VAX\-11s after 1983 were +provided with an optional "G" format closer to the IEEE +double\-precision format. The earlier DEC MicroVAXs have no +D format, only G double\-precision. (Why? Why not?) +.PP +Properties of D_floating\-point: +.RS +Wordsize: 64 bits, 8 bytes. Radix: Binary. +.br +Precision: 56 +.if n \ +sig. +.if t \ +significant +bits, roughly like 17 +.if n \ +sig. +.if t \ +significant +decimals. +.RS +If x and x' are consecutive positive D_floating\-point +numbers (they differ by 1 \*(up), then +.br +1.3e\-17 < 0.5**56 < (x'\-x)/x \(<= 0.5**55 < 2.8e\-17. +.RE +.nf +.ta \w'Range:'u+1n +\w'Underflow threshold'u+1n +\w'= 2.0**127'u+1n +Range: Overflow threshold = 2.0**127 = 1.7e38. + Underflow threshold = 0.5**128 = 2.9e\-39. + NOTE: THIS RANGE IS COMPARATIVELY NARROW. +.ta +.fi +.RS +Overflow customarily stops computation. +.br +Underflow is customarily flushed quietly to zero. +.br +CAUTION: +.RS +It is possible to have x +.if n \ +!= +.if t \ +\(!= +y and yet +x\-y = 0 because of underflow. Similarly +x > y > 0 cannot prevent either x\(**y = 0 +or y/x = 0 from happening without warning. +.RE +.RE +Zero is represented ambiguously. +.RS +Although 2**55 different representations of zero are accepted by +the hardware, only the obvious representation is ever produced. +There is no \-0 on a VAX. +.RE +.If +is not part of the VAX architecture. +.br +Reserved operands: +.RS +of the 2**55 that the hardware +recognizes, only one of them is ever produced. +Any floating\-point operation upon a reserved +operand, even a MOVF or MOVD, customarily stops +computation, so they are not much used. +.RE +Exceptions: +.RS +Divisions by zero and operations that +overflow are invalid operations that customarily +stop computation or, in earlier machines, produce +reserved operands that will stop computation. +.RE +Rounding: +.RS +Every rational operation (+, \-, \(**, /) on a +VAX (but not necessarily on a PDP\-11), if not an +over/underflow nor division by zero, is rounded to +within half an \*(up, and when the rounding error is +exactly half an \*(up then rounding is away from 0. +.RE +.RE +.PP +Except for its narrow range, D_floating\-point is one of the +better computer arithmetics designed in the 1960's. +Its properties are reflected fairly faithfully in the elementary +functions for a VAX distributed in 4.3 BSD. +They over/underflow only if their results have to lie out of range +or very nearly so, and then they behave much as any rational +arithmetic operation that over/underflowed would behave. +Similarly, expressions like log(0) and atanh(1) behave +like 1/0; and sqrt(\-3) and acos(3) behave like 0/0; +they all produce reserved operands and/or stop computation! +The situation is described in more detail in manual pages. +.RS +.ll -0.5i +\fIThis response seems excessively punitive, so it is destined +to be replaced at some time in the foreseeable future by a +more flexible but still uniform scheme being developed to +handle all floating\-point arithmetic exceptions neatly. +See infnan(3M) for the present state of affairs.\fR +.ll +0.5i +.RE +.PP +How do the functions in 4.3 BSD's new \fIlibm\fR for UNIX +compare with their counterparts in DEC's VAX/VMS library? +Some of the VMS functions are a little faster, some are +a little more accurate, some are more puritanical about +exceptions (like pow(0.0,0.0) and atan2(0.0,0.0)), +and most occupy much more memory than their counterparts in +\fIlibm\fR. +The VMS codes interpolate in large table to achieve +speed and accuracy; the \fIlibm\fR codes use tricky formulas +compact enough that all of them may some day fit into a ROM. +.PP +More important, DEC regards the VMS codes as proprietary +and guards them zealously against unauthorized use. But the +\fIlibm\fR codes in 4.3 BSD are intended for the public domain; +they may be copied freely provided their provenance is always +acknowledged, and provided users assist the authors in their +researches by reporting experience with the codes. +Therefore no user of UNIX on a machine whose arithmetic resembles +VAX D_floating\-point need use anything worse than the new \fIlibm\fR. +.PP +\fBIEEE STANDARD 754 Floating\-Point Arithmetic:\fR +.PP +This standard is on its way to becoming more widely adopted +than any other design for computer arithmetic. +VLSI chips that conform to some version of that standard have been +produced by a host of manufacturers, among them ... +.nf +.ta 0.5i +\w'Intel i8070, i80287'u+6n + Intel i8087, i80287 National Semiconductor 32081 + Motorola 68881 Weitek WTL-1032, ... , -1165 + Zilog Z8070 Western Electric (AT&T) WE32106. +.ta +.fi +Other implementations range from software, done thoroughly +in the Apple Macintosh, through VLSI in the Hewlett\-Packard +9000 series, to the ELXSI 6400 running ECL at 3 Megaflops. +Several other companies have adopted the formats +of IEEE 754 without, alas, adhering to the standard's way +of handling rounding and exceptions like over/underflow. +The DEC VAX G_floating\-point format is very similar to the IEEE +754 Double format, so similar that the C programs for the +IEEE versions of most of the elementary functions listed +above could easily be converted to run on a MicroVAX, though +nobody has volunteered to do that yet. +.PP +The codes in 4.3 BSD's \fIlibm\fR for machines that conform to +IEEE 754 are intended primarily for the National Semi. 32081 +and WTL 1164/65. To use these codes with the Intel or Zilog +chips, or with the Apple Macintosh or ELXSI 6400, is to +forego the use of better codes provided (perhaps freely) by +those companies and designed by some of the authors of the +codes above. +Except for \fIatan\fR, \fIcabs\fR, \fIcbrt\fR, \fIerf\fR, +\fIerfc\fR, \fIhypot\fR, \fIj0\-jn\fR, \fIlgamma\fR, \fIpow\fR +and \fIy0\-yn\fR, +the Motorola 68881 has all the functions in \fIlibm\fR on chip, +and faster and more accurate; +it, Apple, the i8087, Z8070 and WE32106 all use 64 +.if n \ +sig. +.if t \ +significant +bits. +The main virtue of 4.3 BSD's +\fIlibm\fR codes is that they are intended for the public domain; +they may be copied freely provided their provenance is always +acknowledged, and provided users assist the authors in their +researches by reporting experience with the codes. +Therefore no user of UNIX on a machine that conforms to +IEEE 754 need use anything worse than the new \fIlibm\fR. +.PP +Properties of IEEE 754 Double\-Precision: +.RS +Wordsize: 64 bits, 8 bytes. Radix: Binary. +.br +Precision: 53 +.if n \ +sig. +.if t \ +significant +bits, roughly like 16 +.if n \ +sig. +.if t \ +significant +decimals. +.RS +If x and x' are consecutive positive Double\-Precision +numbers (they differ by 1 \*(up), then +.br +1.1e\-16 < 0.5**53 < (x'\-x)/x \(<= 0.5**52 < 2.3e\-16. +.RE +.nf +.ta \w'Range:'u+1n +\w'Underflow threshold'u+1n +\w'= 2.0**1024'u+1n +Range: Overflow threshold = 2.0**1024 = 1.8e308 + Underflow threshold = 0.5**1022 = 2.2e\-308 +.ta +.fi +.RS +Overflow goes by default to a signed +.If "" . +.br +Underflow is \fIGradual,\fR rounding to the nearest +integer multiple of 0.5**1074 = 4.9e\-324. +.RE +Zero is represented ambiguously as +0 or \-0. +.RS +Its sign transforms correctly through multiplication or +division, and is preserved by addition of zeros +with like signs; but x\-x yields +0 for every +finite x. The only operations that reveal zero's +sign are division by zero and copysign(x,\(+-0). +In particular, comparison (x > y, x \(>= y, etc.) +cannot be affected by the sign of zero; but if +finite x = y then +.If +\&= 1/(x\-y) +.if n \ +!= +.if t \ +\(!= +\-1/(y\-x) = +.If \- . +.RE +.If +is signed. +.RS +it persists when added to itself +or to any finite number. Its sign transforms +correctly through multiplication and division, and +.If (finite)/\(+- \0=\0\(+-0 +(nonzero)/0 = +.If \(+- . +But +.if n \ +Infinity\-Infinity, Infinity\(**0 and Infinity/Infinity +.if t \ +\(if\-\(if, \(if\(**0 and \(if/\(if +are, like 0/0 and sqrt(\-3), +invalid operations that produce \*(nn. ... +.RE +Reserved operands: +.RS +there are 2**53\-2 of them, all +called \*(nn (\fIN\fRot \fIa N\fRumber). +Some, called Signaling \*(nns, trap any floating\-point operation +performed upon them; they are used to mark missing +or uninitialized values, or nonexistent elements +of arrays. The rest are Quiet \*(nns; they are +the default results of Invalid Operations, and +propagate through subsequent arithmetic operations. +If x +.if n \ +!= +.if t \ +\(!= +x then x is \*(nn; every other predicate +(x > y, x = y, x < y, ...) is FALSE if \*(nn is involved. +.br +NOTE: Trichotomy is violated by \*(nn. +.RS +Besides being FALSE, predicates that entail ordered +comparison, rather than mere (in)equality, +signal Invalid Operation when \*(nn is involved. +.RE +.RE +Rounding: +.RS +Every algebraic operation (+, \-, \(**, /, +.if n \ +sqrt) +.if t \ +\(sr) +is rounded by default to within half an \*(up, and +when the rounding error is exactly half an \*(up then +the rounded value's least significant bit is zero. +This kind of rounding is usually the best kind, +sometimes provably so; for instance, for every +x = 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ..., 2.0**52, we find +(x/3.0)\(**3.0 == x and (x/10.0)\(**10.0 == x and ... +despite that both the quotients and the products +have been rounded. Only rounding like IEEE 754 +can do that. But no single kind of rounding can be +proved best for every circumstance, so IEEE 754 +provides rounding towards zero or towards +.If + +or towards +.If \- +at the programmer's option. And the +same kinds of rounding are specified for +Binary\-Decimal Conversions, at least for magnitudes +between roughly 1.0e\-10 and 1.0e37. +.RE +Exceptions: +.RS +IEEE 754 recognizes five kinds of floating\-point exceptions, +listed below in declining order of probable importance. +.RS +.nf +.ta \w'Invalid Operation'u+6n +\w'Gradual Underflow'u+2n +Exception Default Result +.tc \(ru + +.tc +Invalid Operation \*(nn, or FALSE +.if n \{\ +Overflow \(+-Infinity +Divide by Zero \(+-Infinity \} +.if t \{\ +Overflow \(+-\(if +Divide by Zero \(+-\(if \} +Underflow Gradual Underflow +Inexact Rounded value +.ta +.fi +.RE +NOTE: An Exception is not an Error unless handled +badly. What makes a class of exceptions exceptional +is that no single default response can be satisfactory +in every instance. On the other hand, if a default +response will serve most instances satisfactorily, +the unsatisfactory instances cannot justify aborting +computation every time the exception occurs. +.RE +.PP +For each kind of floating\-point exception, IEEE 754 +provides a Flag that is raised each time its exception +is signaled, and stays raised until the program resets +it. Programs may also test, save and restore a flag. +Thus, IEEE 754 provides three ways by which programs +may cope with exceptions for which the default result +might be unsatisfactory: +.IP 1) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +Test for a condition that might cause an exception +later, and branch to avoid the exception. +.IP 2) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +Test a flag to see whether an exception has occurred +since the program last reset its flag. +.IP 3) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +Test a result to see whether it is a value that only +an exception could have produced. +.RS +CAUTION: The only reliable ways to discover +whether Underflow has occurred are to test whether +products or quotients lie closer to zero than the +underflow threshold, or to test the Underflow +flag. (Sums and differences cannot underflow in +IEEE 754; if x +.if n \ +!= +.if t \ +\(!= +y then x\-y is correct to +full precision and certainly nonzero regardless of +how tiny it may be.) Products and quotients that +underflow gradually can lose accuracy gradually +without vanishing, so comparing them with zero +(as one might on a VAX) will not reveal the loss. +Fortunately, if a gradually underflowed value is +destined to be added to something bigger than the +underflow threshold, as is almost always the case, +digits lost to gradual underflow will not be missed +because they would have been rounded off anyway. +So gradual underflows are usually \fIprovably\fR ignorable. +The same cannot be said of underflows flushed to 0. +.RE +.PP +At the option of an implementor conforming to IEEE 754, +other ways to cope with exceptions may be provided: +.IP 4) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +ABORT. This mechanism classifies an exception in +advance as an incident to be handled by means +traditionally associated with error\-handling +statements like "ON ERROR GO TO ...". Different +languages offer different forms of this statement, +but most share the following characteristics: +.IP \(em \w'\0\0\0\0'u +No means is provided to substitute a value for +the offending operation's result and resume +computation from what may be the middle of an +expression. An exceptional result is abandoned. +.IP \(em \w'\0\0\0\0'u +In a subprogram that lacks an error\-handling +statement, an exception causes the subprogram to +abort within whatever program called it, and so +on back up the chain of calling subprograms until +an error\-handling statement is encountered or the +whole task is aborted and memory is dumped. +.IP 5) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +STOP. This mechanism, requiring an interactive +debugging environment, is more for the programmer +than the program. It classifies an exception in +advance as a symptom of a programmer's error; the +exception suspends execution as near as it can to +the offending operation so that the programmer can +look around to see how it happened. Quite often +the first several exceptions turn out to be quite +unexceptionable, so the programmer ought ideally +to be able to resume execution after each one as if +execution had not been stopped. +.IP 6) \w'\0\0\0\0'u +\&... Other ways lie beyond the scope of this document. +.RE +.PP +The crucial problem for exception handling is the problem of +Scope, and the problem's solution is understood, but not +enough manpower was available to implement it fully in time +to be distributed in 4.3 BSD's \fIlibm\fR. Ideally, each +elementary function should act as if it were indivisible, or +atomic, in the sense that ... +.IP i) \w'iii)'u+2n +No exception should be signaled that is not deserved by +the data supplied to that function. +.IP ii) \w'iii)'u+2n +Any exception signaled should be identified with that +function rather than with one of its subroutines. +.IP iii) \w'iii)'u+2n +The internal behavior of an atomic function should not +be disrupted when a calling program changes from +one to another of the five or so ways of handling +exceptions listed above, although the definition +of the function may be correlated intentionally +with exception handling. +.PP +Ideally, every programmer should be able \fIconveniently\fR to +turn a debugged subprogram into one that appears atomic to +its users. But simulating all three characteristics of an +atomic function is still a tedious affair, entailing hosts +of tests and saves\-restores; work is under way to ameliorate +the inconvenience. +.PP +Meanwhile, the functions in \fIlibm\fR are only approximately +atomic. They signal no inappropriate exception except +possibly ... +.RS +Over/Underflow +.RS +when a result, if properly computed, might have lain barely within range, and +.RE +Inexact in \fIcabs\fR, \fIcbrt\fR, \fIhypot\fR, \fIlog10\fR and \fIpow\fR +.RS +when it happens to be exact, thanks to fortuitous cancellation of errors. +.RE +.RE +Otherwise, ... +.RS +Invalid Operation is signaled only when +.RS +any result but \*(nn would probably be misleading. +.RE +Overflow is signaled only when +.RS +the exact result would be finite but beyond the overflow threshold. +.RE +Divide\-by\-Zero is signaled only when +.RS +a function takes exactly infinite values at finite operands. +.RE +Underflow is signaled only when +.RS +the exact result would be nonzero but tinier than the underflow threshold. +.RE +Inexact is signaled only when +.RS +greater range or precision would be needed to represent the exact result. +.RE +.RE +.SH BUGS +When signals are appropriate, they are emitted by certain +operations within the codes, so a subroutine\-trace may be +needed to identify the function with its signal in case +method 5) above is in use. And the codes all take the +IEEE 754 defaults for granted; this means that a decision to +trap all divisions by zero could disrupt a code that would +otherwise get correct results despite division by zero. +.SH SEE ALSO +An explanation of IEEE 754 and its proposed extension p854 +was published in the IEEE magazine MICRO in August 1984 under +the title "A Proposed Radix\- and Word\-length\-independent +Standard for Floating\-point Arithmetic" by W. J. Cody et al. +The manuals for Pascal, C and BASIC on the Apple Macintosh +document the features of IEEE 754 pretty well. +Articles in the IEEE magazine COMPUTER vol. 14 no. 3 (Mar. +1981), and in the ACM SIGNUM Newsletter Special Issue of +Oct. 1979, may be helpful although they pertain to +superseded drafts of the standard. |