This is libc.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from libc.texinfo. This is ‘The GNU C Library Reference Manual’, for version 2.33 (GNU). Copyright © 1993–2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the Invariant Sections being “Free Software Needs Free Documentation” and “GNU Lesser General Public License”, the Front-Cover texts being “A GNU Manual”, and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". (a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in developing GNU and promoting software freedom.” INFO-DIR-SECTION Software libraries START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Libc: (libc). C library. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY INFO-DIR-SECTION GNU C library functions and macros START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * ALTWERASE: (libc)Local Modes. * ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN: (libc)Argp Parser Functions. * ARG_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * BC_BASE_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * BC_DIM_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * BC_SCALE_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * BC_STRING_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * BRKINT: (libc)Input Modes. * BUFSIZ: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * CCTS_OFLOW: (libc)Control Modes. * CHAR_BIT: (libc)Width of Type. * CHILD_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * CIGNORE: (libc)Control Modes. * CLK_TCK: (libc)Processor Time. * CLOCAL: (libc)Control Modes. * CLOCKS_PER_SEC: (libc)CPU Time. * CLOCK_MONOTONIC: (libc)Getting the Time. * CLOCK_REALTIME: (libc)Getting the Time. * COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * CPU_CLR: (libc)CPU Affinity. * CPU_FEATURE_USABLE: (libc)X86. * CPU_ISSET: (libc)CPU Affinity. * CPU_SET: (libc)CPU Affinity. * CPU_SETSIZE: (libc)CPU Affinity. * CPU_ZERO: (libc)CPU Affinity. * CREAD: (libc)Control Modes. * CRTS_IFLOW: (libc)Control Modes. * CS5: (libc)Control Modes. * CS6: (libc)Control Modes. * CS7: (libc)Control Modes. * CS8: (libc)Control Modes. * CSIZE: (libc)Control Modes. * CSTOPB: (libc)Control Modes. * DTTOIF: (libc)Directory Entries. * E2BIG: (libc)Error Codes. * EACCES: (libc)Error Codes. * EADDRINUSE: (libc)Error Codes. * EADDRNOTAVAIL: (libc)Error Codes. * EADV: (libc)Error Codes. * EAFNOSUPPORT: (libc)Error Codes. * EAGAIN: (libc)Error Codes. * EALREADY: (libc)Error Codes. * EAUTH: (libc)Error Codes. * EBACKGROUND: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADE: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADF: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADFD: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADMSG: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADR: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADRPC: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADRQC: (libc)Error Codes. * EBADSLT: (libc)Error Codes. * EBFONT: (libc)Error Codes. * EBUSY: (libc)Error Codes. * ECANCELED: (libc)Error Codes. * ECHILD: (libc)Error Codes. * ECHO: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHOCTL: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHOE: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHOK: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHOKE: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHONL: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHOPRT: (libc)Local Modes. * ECHRNG: (libc)Error Codes. * ECOMM: (libc)Error Codes. * ECONNABORTED: (libc)Error Codes. * ECONNREFUSED: (libc)Error Codes. * ECONNRESET: (libc)Error Codes. * ED: (libc)Error Codes. * EDEADLK: (libc)Error Codes. * EDEADLOCK: (libc)Error Codes. * EDESTADDRREQ: (libc)Error Codes. * EDIED: (libc)Error Codes. * EDOM: (libc)Error Codes. * EDOTDOT: (libc)Error Codes. * EDQUOT: (libc)Error Codes. * EEXIST: (libc)Error Codes. * EFAULT: (libc)Error Codes. * EFBIG: (libc)Error Codes. * EFTYPE: (libc)Error Codes. * EGRATUITOUS: (libc)Error Codes. * EGREGIOUS: (libc)Error Codes. * EHOSTDOWN: (libc)Error Codes. * EHOSTUNREACH: (libc)Error Codes. * EHWPOISON: (libc)Error Codes. * EIDRM: (libc)Error Codes. * EIEIO: (libc)Error Codes. * EILSEQ: (libc)Error Codes. * EINPROGRESS: (libc)Error Codes. * EINTR: (libc)Error Codes. * EINVAL: (libc)Error Codes. * EIO: (libc)Error Codes. * EISCONN: (libc)Error Codes. * EISDIR: (libc)Error Codes. * EISNAM: (libc)Error Codes. * EKEYEXPIRED: (libc)Error Codes. * EKEYREJECTED: (libc)Error Codes. * EKEYREVOKED: (libc)Error Codes. * EL2HLT: (libc)Error Codes. * EL2NSYNC: (libc)Error Codes. * EL3HLT: (libc)Error Codes. * EL3RST: (libc)Error Codes. * ELIBACC: (libc)Error Codes. * ELIBBAD: (libc)Error Codes. * ELIBEXEC: (libc)Error Codes. * ELIBMAX: (libc)Error Codes. * ELIBSCN: (libc)Error Codes. * ELNRNG: (libc)Error Codes. * ELOOP: (libc)Error Codes. * EMEDIUMTYPE: (libc)Error Codes. * EMFILE: (libc)Error Codes. * EMLINK: (libc)Error Codes. * EMSGSIZE: (libc)Error Codes. * EMULTIHOP: (libc)Error Codes. * ENAMETOOLONG: (libc)Error Codes. * ENAVAIL: (libc)Error Codes. * ENEEDAUTH: (libc)Error Codes. * ENETDOWN: (libc)Error Codes. * ENETRESET: (libc)Error Codes. * ENETUNREACH: (libc)Error Codes. * ENFILE: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOANO: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOBUFS: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOCSI: (libc)Error Codes. * ENODATA: (libc)Error Codes. * ENODEV: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOENT: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOEXEC: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOKEY: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOLCK: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOLINK: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOMEDIUM: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOMEM: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOMSG: (libc)Error Codes. * ENONET: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOPKG: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOPROTOOPT: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOSPC: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOSR: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOSTR: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOSYS: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTBLK: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTCONN: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTDIR: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTEMPTY: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTNAM: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTRECOVERABLE: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTSOCK: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTSUP: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTTY: (libc)Error Codes. * ENOTUNIQ: (libc)Error Codes. * ENXIO: (libc)Error Codes. * EOF: (libc)EOF and Errors. * EOPNOTSUPP: (libc)Error Codes. * EOVERFLOW: (libc)Error Codes. * EOWNERDEAD: (libc)Error Codes. * EPERM: (libc)Error Codes. * EPFNOSUPPORT: (libc)Error Codes. * EPIPE: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROCLIM: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROCUNAVAIL: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROGMISMATCH: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROGUNAVAIL: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROTO: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROTONOSUPPORT: (libc)Error Codes. * EPROTOTYPE: (libc)Error Codes. * EQUIV_CLASS_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * ERANGE: (libc)Error Codes. * EREMCHG: (libc)Error Codes. * EREMOTE: (libc)Error Codes. * EREMOTEIO: (libc)Error Codes. * ERESTART: (libc)Error Codes. * ERFKILL: (libc)Error Codes. * EROFS: (libc)Error Codes. * ERPCMISMATCH: (libc)Error Codes. * ESHUTDOWN: (libc)Error Codes. * ESOCKTNOSUPPORT: (libc)Error Codes. * ESPIPE: (libc)Error Codes. * ESRCH: (libc)Error Codes. * ESRMNT: (libc)Error Codes. * ESTALE: (libc)Error Codes. * ESTRPIPE: (libc)Error Codes. * ETIME: (libc)Error Codes. * ETIMEDOUT: (libc)Error Codes. * ETOOMANYREFS: (libc)Error Codes. * ETXTBSY: (libc)Error Codes. * EUCLEAN: (libc)Error Codes. * EUNATCH: (libc)Error Codes. * EUSERS: (libc)Error Codes. * EWOULDBLOCK: (libc)Error Codes. * EXDEV: (libc)Error Codes. * EXFULL: (libc)Error Codes. * EXIT_FAILURE: (libc)Exit Status. * EXIT_SUCCESS: (libc)Exit Status. * EXPR_NEST_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * FD_CLOEXEC: (libc)Descriptor Flags. * FD_CLR: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * FD_ISSET: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * FD_SET: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * FD_SETSIZE: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * FD_ZERO: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * FE_SNANS_ALWAYS_SIGNAL: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * FILENAME_MAX: (libc)Limits for Files. * FLUSHO: (libc)Local Modes. * FOPEN_MAX: (libc)Opening Streams. * FP_ILOGB0: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * FP_ILOGBNAN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * FP_LLOGB0: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * FP_LLOGBNAN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * F_DUPFD: (libc)Duplicating Descriptors. * F_GETFD: (libc)Descriptor Flags. * F_GETFL: (libc)Getting File Status Flags. * F_GETLK: (libc)File Locks. * F_GETOWN: (libc)Interrupt Input. * F_OFD_GETLK: (libc)Open File Description Locks. * F_OFD_SETLK: (libc)Open File Description Locks. * F_OFD_SETLKW: (libc)Open File Description Locks. * F_OK: (libc)Testing File Access. * F_SETFD: (libc)Descriptor Flags. * F_SETFL: (libc)Getting File Status Flags. * F_SETLK: (libc)File Locks. * F_SETLKW: (libc)File Locks. * F_SETOWN: (libc)Interrupt Input. * HAS_CPU_FEATURE: (libc)X86. * HUGE_VAL: (libc)Math Error Reporting. * HUGE_VALF: (libc)Math Error Reporting. * HUGE_VALL: (libc)Math Error Reporting. * HUGE_VAL_FN: (libc)Math Error Reporting. * HUGE_VAL_FNx: (libc)Math Error Reporting. * HUPCL: (libc)Control Modes. * I: (libc)Complex Numbers. * ICANON: (libc)Local Modes. * ICRNL: (libc)Input Modes. * IEXTEN: (libc)Local Modes. * IFNAMSIZ: (libc)Interface Naming. * IFTODT: (libc)Directory Entries. * IGNBRK: (libc)Input Modes. * IGNCR: (libc)Input Modes. * IGNPAR: (libc)Input Modes. * IMAXBEL: (libc)Input Modes. * INADDR_ANY: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * INADDR_BROADCAST: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * INADDR_LOOPBACK: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * INADDR_NONE: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * INFINITY: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * INLCR: (libc)Input Modes. * INPCK: (libc)Input Modes. * IPPORT_RESERVED: (libc)Ports. * IPPORT_USERRESERVED: (libc)Ports. * ISIG: (libc)Local Modes. * ISTRIP: (libc)Input Modes. * IXANY: (libc)Input Modes. * IXOFF: (libc)Input Modes. * IXON: (libc)Input Modes. * LINE_MAX: (libc)Utility Limits. * LINK_MAX: (libc)Limits for Files. * L_ctermid: (libc)Identifying the Terminal. * L_cuserid: (libc)Who Logged In. * L_tmpnam: (libc)Temporary Files. * MAXNAMLEN: (libc)Limits for Files. * MAXSYMLINKS: (libc)Symbolic Links. * MAX_CANON: (libc)Limits for Files. * MAX_INPUT: (libc)Limits for Files. * MB_CUR_MAX: (libc)Selecting the Conversion. * MB_LEN_MAX: (libc)Selecting the Conversion. * MDMBUF: (libc)Control Modes. * MSG_DONTROUTE: (libc)Socket Data Options. * MSG_OOB: (libc)Socket Data Options. * MSG_PEEK: (libc)Socket Data Options. * NAME_MAX: (libc)Limits for Files. * NAN: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * NCCS: (libc)Mode Data Types. * NGROUPS_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * NOFLSH: (libc)Local Modes. * NOKERNINFO: (libc)Local Modes. * NSIG: (libc)Standard Signals. * NULL: (libc)Null Pointer Constant. * ONLCR: (libc)Output Modes. * ONOEOT: (libc)Output Modes. * OPEN_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * OPOST: (libc)Output Modes. * OXTABS: (libc)Output Modes. * O_ACCMODE: (libc)Access Modes. * O_APPEND: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_ASYNC: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_CREAT: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_DIRECTORY: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_EXCL: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_EXEC: (libc)Access Modes. * O_EXLOCK: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_FSYNC: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_IGNORE_CTTY: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_NDELAY: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_NOATIME: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_NOCTTY: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_NOFOLLOW: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_NOLINK: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_NONBLOCK: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_NONBLOCK: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_NOTRANS: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_PATH: (libc)Access Modes. * O_RDONLY: (libc)Access Modes. * O_RDWR: (libc)Access Modes. * O_READ: (libc)Access Modes. * O_SHLOCK: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_SYNC: (libc)Operating Modes. * O_TMPFILE: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_TRUNC: (libc)Open-time Flags. * O_WRITE: (libc)Access Modes. * O_WRONLY: (libc)Access Modes. * PARENB: (libc)Control Modes. * PARMRK: (libc)Input Modes. * PARODD: (libc)Control Modes. * PATH_MAX: (libc)Limits for Files. * PA_FLAG_MASK: (libc)Parsing a Template String. * PENDIN: (libc)Local Modes. * PF_FILE: (libc)Local Namespace Details. * PF_INET6: (libc)Internet Namespace. * PF_INET: (libc)Internet Namespace. * PF_LOCAL: (libc)Local Namespace Details. * PF_UNIX: (libc)Local Namespace Details. * PIPE_BUF: (libc)Limits for Files. * PTHREAD_ATTR_NO_SIGMASK_NP: (libc)Initial Thread Signal Mask. * P_tmpdir: (libc)Temporary Files. * RAND_MAX: (libc)ISO Random. * RE_DUP_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * RLIM_INFINITY: (libc)Limits on Resources. * R_OK: (libc)Testing File Access. * SA_NOCLDSTOP: (libc)Flags for Sigaction. * SA_ONSTACK: (libc)Flags for Sigaction. * SA_RESTART: (libc)Flags for Sigaction. * SEEK_CUR: (libc)File Positioning. * SEEK_END: (libc)File Positioning. * SEEK_SET: (libc)File Positioning. * SIGABRT: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGALRM: (libc)Alarm Signals. * SIGBUS: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGCHLD: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGCLD: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGCONT: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGEMT: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGFPE: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGHUP: (libc)Termination Signals. * SIGILL: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGINFO: (libc)Miscellaneous Signals. * SIGINT: (libc)Termination Signals. * SIGIO: (libc)Asynchronous I/O Signals. * SIGIOT: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGKILL: (libc)Termination Signals. * SIGLOST: (libc)Operation Error Signals. * SIGPIPE: (libc)Operation Error Signals. * SIGPOLL: (libc)Asynchronous I/O Signals. * SIGPROF: (libc)Alarm Signals. * SIGQUIT: (libc)Termination Signals. * SIGSEGV: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGSTOP: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGSYS: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGTERM: (libc)Termination Signals. * SIGTRAP: (libc)Program Error Signals. * SIGTSTP: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGTTIN: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGTTOU: (libc)Job Control Signals. * SIGURG: (libc)Asynchronous I/O Signals. * SIGUSR1: (libc)Miscellaneous Signals. * SIGUSR2: (libc)Miscellaneous Signals. * SIGVTALRM: (libc)Alarm Signals. * SIGWINCH: (libc)Miscellaneous Signals. * SIGXCPU: (libc)Operation Error Signals. * SIGXFSZ: (libc)Operation Error Signals. * SIG_ERR: (libc)Basic Signal Handling. * SNAN: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * SNANF: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * SNANFN: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * SNANFNx: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * SNANL: (libc)Infinity and NaN. * SOCK_DGRAM: (libc)Communication Styles. * SOCK_RAW: (libc)Communication Styles. * SOCK_RDM: (libc)Communication Styles. * SOCK_SEQPACKET: (libc)Communication Styles. * SOCK_STREAM: (libc)Communication Styles. * SOL_SOCKET: (libc)Socket-Level Options. * SSIZE_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * STREAM_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * SUN_LEN: (libc)Local Namespace Details. * S_IFMT: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISBLK: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISCHR: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISDIR: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISFIFO: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISLNK: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISREG: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_ISSOCK: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_TYPEISMQ: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_TYPEISSEM: (libc)Testing File Type. * S_TYPEISSHM: (libc)Testing File Type. * TMP_MAX: (libc)Temporary Files. * TOSTOP: (libc)Local Modes. * TZNAME_MAX: (libc)General Limits. * VDISCARD: (libc)Other Special. * VDSUSP: (libc)Signal Characters. * VEOF: (libc)Editing Characters. * VEOL2: (libc)Editing Characters. * VEOL: (libc)Editing Characters. * VERASE: (libc)Editing Characters. * VINTR: (libc)Signal Characters. * VKILL: (libc)Editing Characters. * VLNEXT: (libc)Other Special. * VMIN: (libc)Noncanonical Input. * VQUIT: (libc)Signal Characters. * VREPRINT: (libc)Editing Characters. * VSTART: (libc)Start/Stop Characters. * VSTATUS: (libc)Other Special. * VSTOP: (libc)Start/Stop Characters. * VSUSP: (libc)Signal Characters. * VTIME: (libc)Noncanonical Input. * VWERASE: (libc)Editing Characters. * WCHAR_MAX: (libc)Extended Char Intro. * WCHAR_MIN: (libc)Extended Char Intro. * WCOREDUMP: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WEOF: (libc)EOF and Errors. * WEOF: (libc)Extended Char Intro. * WEXITSTATUS: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WIFEXITED: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WIFSIGNALED: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WIFSTOPPED: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WSTOPSIG: (libc)Process Completion Status. * WTERMSIG: (libc)Process Completion Status. * W_OK: (libc)Testing File Access. * X_OK: (libc)Testing File Access. * _Complex_I: (libc)Complex Numbers. * _Exit: (libc)Termination Internals. * _IOFBF: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * _IOLBF: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * _IONBF: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * _Imaginary_I: (libc)Complex Numbers. * _PATH_UTMP: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * _PATH_WTMP: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * _POSIX2_C_DEV: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX2_C_VERSION: (libc)Version Supported. * _POSIX2_FORT_DEV: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX2_FORT_RUN: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX2_LOCALEDEF: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX2_SW_DEV: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX_CHOWN_RESTRICTED: (libc)Options for Files. * _POSIX_JOB_CONTROL: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX_NO_TRUNC: (libc)Options for Files. * _POSIX_SAVED_IDS: (libc)System Options. * _POSIX_VDISABLE: (libc)Options for Files. * _POSIX_VERSION: (libc)Version Supported. * __fbufsize: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * __flbf: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * __fpending: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * __fpurge: (libc)Flushing Buffers. * __freadable: (libc)Opening Streams. * __freading: (libc)Opening Streams. * __fsetlocking: (libc)Streams and Threads. * __fwritable: (libc)Opening Streams. * __fwriting: (libc)Opening Streams. * __gconv_end_fct: (libc)glibc iconv Implementation. * __gconv_fct: (libc)glibc iconv Implementation. * __gconv_init_fct: (libc)glibc iconv Implementation. * __ppc_get_timebase: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_get_timebase_freq: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_mdoio: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_mdoom: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_set_ppr_low: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_set_ppr_med: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_set_ppr_med_high: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_set_ppr_med_low: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_set_ppr_very_low: (libc)PowerPC. * __ppc_yield: (libc)PowerPC. * __riscv_flush_icache: (libc)RISC-V. * __va_copy: (libc)Argument Macros. * __x86_get_cpuid_feature_leaf: (libc)X86. * _exit: (libc)Termination Internals. * _flushlbf: (libc)Flushing Buffers. * _tolower: (libc)Case Conversion. * _toupper: (libc)Case Conversion. * a64l: (libc)Encode Binary Data. * abort: (libc)Aborting a Program. * abs: (libc)Absolute Value. * accept: (libc)Accepting Connections. * access: (libc)Testing File Access. * acos: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * acosf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * acosfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * acosfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * acosh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * acoshf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * acoshfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * acoshfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * acoshl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * acosl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * addmntent: (libc)mtab. * addseverity: (libc)Adding Severity Classes. * adjtime: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * adjtimex: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * aio_cancel64: (libc)Cancel AIO Operations. * aio_cancel: (libc)Cancel AIO Operations. * aio_error64: (libc)Status of AIO Operations. * aio_error: (libc)Status of AIO Operations. * aio_fsync64: (libc)Synchronizing AIO Operations. * aio_fsync: (libc)Synchronizing AIO Operations. * aio_init: (libc)Configuration of AIO. * aio_read64: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * aio_read: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * aio_return64: (libc)Status of AIO Operations. * aio_return: (libc)Status of AIO Operations. * aio_suspend64: (libc)Synchronizing AIO Operations. * aio_suspend: (libc)Synchronizing AIO Operations. * aio_write64: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * aio_write: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * alarm: (libc)Setting an Alarm. * aligned_alloc: (libc)Aligned Memory Blocks. * alloca: (libc)Variable Size Automatic. * alphasort64: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * alphasort: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * argp_error: (libc)Argp Helper Functions. * argp_failure: (libc)Argp Helper Functions. * argp_help: (libc)Argp Help. * argp_parse: (libc)Argp. * argp_state_help: (libc)Argp Helper Functions. * argp_usage: (libc)Argp Helper Functions. * argz_add: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_add_sep: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_append: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_count: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_create: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_create_sep: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_delete: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_extract: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_insert: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_next: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_replace: (libc)Argz Functions. * argz_stringify: (libc)Argz Functions. * asctime: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * asctime_r: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * asin: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * asinf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * asinfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * asinfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * asinh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * asinhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * asinhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * asinhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * asinhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * asinl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * asprintf: (libc)Dynamic Output. * assert: (libc)Consistency Checking. * assert_perror: (libc)Consistency Checking. * atan2: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atan2f: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atan2fN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atan2fNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atan2l: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atan: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atanf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atanfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atanfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atanh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * atanhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * atanhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * atanhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * atanhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * atanl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * atexit: (libc)Cleanups on Exit. * atof: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * atoi: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * atol: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * atoll: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * backtrace: (libc)Backtraces. * backtrace_symbols: (libc)Backtraces. * backtrace_symbols_fd: (libc)Backtraces. * basename: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * basename: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * bcmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * bcopy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * bind: (libc)Setting Address. * bind_textdomain_codeset: (libc)Charset conversion in gettext. * bindtextdomain: (libc)Locating gettext catalog. * brk: (libc)Resizing the Data Segment. * bsearch: (libc)Array Search Function. * btowc: (libc)Converting a Character. * bzero: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * cabs: (libc)Absolute Value. * cabsf: (libc)Absolute Value. * cabsfN: (libc)Absolute Value. * cabsfNx: (libc)Absolute Value. * cabsl: (libc)Absolute Value. * cacos: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * cacosf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * cacosfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * cacosfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * cacosh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cacoshf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cacoshfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cacoshfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cacoshl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cacosl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * call_once: (libc)Call Once. * calloc: (libc)Allocating Cleared Space. * canonicalize: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * canonicalize_file_name: (libc)Symbolic Links. * canonicalizef: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * canonicalizefN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * canonicalizefNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * canonicalizel: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * carg: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cargf: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cargfN: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cargfNx: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cargl: (libc)Operations on Complex. * casin: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * casinf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * casinfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * casinfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * casinh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * casinhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * casinhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * casinhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * casinhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * casinl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catan: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catanf: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catanfN: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catanfNx: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catanh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * catanhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * catanhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * catanhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * catanhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * catanl: (libc)Inverse Trig Functions. * catclose: (libc)The catgets Functions. * catgets: (libc)The catgets Functions. * catopen: (libc)The catgets Functions. * cbrt: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cbrtf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cbrtfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cbrtfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cbrtl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ccos: (libc)Trig Functions. * ccosf: (libc)Trig Functions. * ccosfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * ccosfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * ccosh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ccoshf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ccoshfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ccoshfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ccoshl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ccosl: (libc)Trig Functions. * ceil: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ceilf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ceilfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ceilfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ceill: (libc)Rounding Functions. * cexp: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cexpf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cexpfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cexpfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cexpl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cfgetispeed: (libc)Line Speed. * cfgetospeed: (libc)Line Speed. * cfmakeraw: (libc)Noncanonical Input. * cfsetispeed: (libc)Line Speed. * cfsetospeed: (libc)Line Speed. * cfsetspeed: (libc)Line Speed. * chdir: (libc)Working Directory. * chmod: (libc)Setting Permissions. * chown: (libc)File Owner. * cimag: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cimagf: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cimagfN: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cimagfNx: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cimagl: (libc)Operations on Complex. * clearenv: (libc)Environment Access. * clearerr: (libc)Error Recovery. * clearerr_unlocked: (libc)Error Recovery. * clock: (libc)CPU Time. * clock_getres: (libc)Getting the Time. * clock_gettime: (libc)Getting the Time. * clock_settime: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * clog10: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clog10f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clog10fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clog10fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clog10l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clog: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clogf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clogfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clogfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * clogl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * close: (libc)Opening and Closing Files. * closedir: (libc)Reading/Closing Directory. * closelog: (libc)closelog. * cnd_broadcast: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * cnd_destroy: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * cnd_init: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * cnd_signal: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * cnd_timedwait: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * cnd_wait: (libc)ISO C Condition Variables. * confstr: (libc)String Parameters. * conj: (libc)Operations on Complex. * conjf: (libc)Operations on Complex. * conjfN: (libc)Operations on Complex. * conjfNx: (libc)Operations on Complex. * conjl: (libc)Operations on Complex. * connect: (libc)Connecting. * copy_file_range: (libc)Copying File Data. * copysign: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * copysignf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * copysignfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * copysignfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * copysignl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * cos: (libc)Trig Functions. * cosf: (libc)Trig Functions. * cosfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * cosfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * cosh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * coshf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * coshfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * coshfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * coshl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * cosl: (libc)Trig Functions. * cpow: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cpowf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cpowfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cpowfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cpowl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * cproj: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cprojf: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cprojfN: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cprojfNx: (libc)Operations on Complex. * cprojl: (libc)Operations on Complex. * creal: (libc)Operations on Complex. * crealf: (libc)Operations on Complex. * crealfN: (libc)Operations on Complex. * crealfNx: (libc)Operations on Complex. * creall: (libc)Operations on Complex. * creat64: (libc)Opening and Closing Files. * creat: (libc)Opening and Closing Files. * crypt: (libc)Passphrase Storage. * crypt_r: (libc)Passphrase Storage. * csin: (libc)Trig Functions. * csinf: (libc)Trig Functions. * csinfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * csinfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * csinh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * csinhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * csinhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * csinhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * csinhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * csinl: (libc)Trig Functions. * csqrt: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * csqrtf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * csqrtfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * csqrtfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * csqrtl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ctan: (libc)Trig Functions. * ctanf: (libc)Trig Functions. * ctanfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * ctanfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * ctanh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ctanhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ctanhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ctanhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ctanhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * ctanl: (libc)Trig Functions. * ctermid: (libc)Identifying the Terminal. * ctime: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * ctime_r: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * cuserid: (libc)Who Logged In. * daddl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * dcgettext: (libc)Translation with gettext. * dcngettext: (libc)Advanced gettext functions. * ddivl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * dgettext: (libc)Translation with gettext. * difftime: (libc)Calculating Elapsed Time. * dirfd: (libc)Opening a Directory. * dirname: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * div: (libc)Integer Division. * dmull: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * dngettext: (libc)Advanced gettext functions. * drand48: (libc)SVID Random. * drand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * drem: (libc)Remainder Functions. * dremf: (libc)Remainder Functions. * dreml: (libc)Remainder Functions. * dsubl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * dup2: (libc)Duplicating Descriptors. * dup: (libc)Duplicating Descriptors. * ecvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * ecvt_r: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * endfsent: (libc)fstab. * endgrent: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * endhostent: (libc)Host Names. * endmntent: (libc)mtab. * endnetent: (libc)Networks Database. * endnetgrent: (libc)Lookup Netgroup. * endprotoent: (libc)Protocols Database. * endpwent: (libc)Scanning All Users. * endservent: (libc)Services Database. * endutent: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * endutxent: (libc)XPG Functions. * envz_add: (libc)Envz Functions. * envz_entry: (libc)Envz Functions. * envz_get: (libc)Envz Functions. * envz_merge: (libc)Envz Functions. * envz_remove: (libc)Envz Functions. * envz_strip: (libc)Envz Functions. * erand48: (libc)SVID Random. * erand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * erf: (libc)Special Functions. * erfc: (libc)Special Functions. * erfcf: (libc)Special Functions. * erfcfN: (libc)Special Functions. * erfcfNx: (libc)Special Functions. * erfcl: (libc)Special Functions. * erff: (libc)Special Functions. * erffN: (libc)Special Functions. * erffNx: (libc)Special Functions. * erfl: (libc)Special Functions. * err: (libc)Error Messages. * errno: (libc)Checking for Errors. * error: (libc)Error Messages. * error_at_line: (libc)Error Messages. * errx: (libc)Error Messages. * execl: (libc)Executing a File. * execle: (libc)Executing a File. * execlp: (libc)Executing a File. * execv: (libc)Executing a File. * execve: (libc)Executing a File. * execvp: (libc)Executing a File. * exit: (libc)Normal Termination. * exp10: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp10f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp10fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp10fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp10l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp2: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp2f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp2fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp2fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp2l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * exp: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * explicit_bzero: (libc)Erasing Sensitive Data. * expm1: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expm1f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expm1fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expm1fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * expm1l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * fMaddfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMaddfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMdivfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMdivfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMmulfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMmulfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMsubfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMsubfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxaddfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxaddfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxdivfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxdivfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxmulfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxmulfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxsubfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fMxsubfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fabs: (libc)Absolute Value. * fabsf: (libc)Absolute Value. * fabsfN: (libc)Absolute Value. * fabsfNx: (libc)Absolute Value. * fabsl: (libc)Absolute Value. * fadd: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * faddl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fchdir: (libc)Working Directory. * fchmod: (libc)Setting Permissions. * fchown: (libc)File Owner. * fclose: (libc)Closing Streams. * fcloseall: (libc)Closing Streams. * fcntl: (libc)Control Operations. * fcvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * fcvt_r: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * fdatasync: (libc)Synchronizing I/O. * fdim: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdimf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdimfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdimfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdiml: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdiv: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdivl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fdopen: (libc)Descriptors and Streams. * fdopendir: (libc)Opening a Directory. * feclearexcept: (libc)Status bit operations. * fedisableexcept: (libc)Control Functions. * feenableexcept: (libc)Control Functions. * fegetenv: (libc)Control Functions. * fegetexcept: (libc)Control Functions. * fegetexceptflag: (libc)Status bit operations. * fegetmode: (libc)Control Functions. * fegetround: (libc)Rounding. * feholdexcept: (libc)Control Functions. * feof: (libc)EOF and Errors. * feof_unlocked: (libc)EOF and Errors. * feraiseexcept: (libc)Status bit operations. * ferror: (libc)EOF and Errors. * ferror_unlocked: (libc)EOF and Errors. * fesetenv: (libc)Control Functions. * fesetexcept: (libc)Status bit operations. * fesetexceptflag: (libc)Status bit operations. * fesetmode: (libc)Control Functions. * fesetround: (libc)Rounding. * fetestexcept: (libc)Status bit operations. * fetestexceptflag: (libc)Status bit operations. * feupdateenv: (libc)Control Functions. * fexecve: (libc)Executing a File. * fflush: (libc)Flushing Buffers. * fflush_unlocked: (libc)Flushing Buffers. * fgetc: (libc)Character Input. * fgetc_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * fgetgrent: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * fgetgrent_r: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * fgetpos64: (libc)Portable Positioning. * fgetpos: (libc)Portable Positioning. * fgetpwent: (libc)Scanning All Users. * fgetpwent_r: (libc)Scanning All Users. * fgets: (libc)Line Input. * fgets_unlocked: (libc)Line Input. * fgetwc: (libc)Character Input. * fgetwc_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * fgetws: (libc)Line Input. * fgetws_unlocked: (libc)Line Input. * fileno: (libc)Descriptors and Streams. * fileno_unlocked: (libc)Descriptors and Streams. * finite: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * finitef: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * finitel: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * flockfile: (libc)Streams and Threads. * floor: (libc)Rounding Functions. * floorf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * floorfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * floorfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * floorl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fma: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmafN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmafNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmal: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmax: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxmag: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxmagf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxmagfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxmagfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmaxmagl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmemopen: (libc)String Streams. * fmin: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminmag: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminmagf: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminmagfN: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminmagfNx: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fminmagl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmod: (libc)Remainder Functions. * fmodf: (libc)Remainder Functions. * fmodfN: (libc)Remainder Functions. * fmodfNx: (libc)Remainder Functions. * fmodl: (libc)Remainder Functions. * fmtmsg: (libc)Printing Formatted Messages. * fmul: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fmull: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fnmatch: (libc)Wildcard Matching. * fopen64: (libc)Opening Streams. * fopen: (libc)Opening Streams. * fopencookie: (libc)Streams and Cookies. * fork: (libc)Creating a Process. * forkpty: (libc)Pseudo-Terminal Pairs. * fpathconf: (libc)Pathconf. * fpclassify: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * fprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * fputc: (libc)Simple Output. * fputc_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * fputs: (libc)Simple Output. * fputs_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * fputwc: (libc)Simple Output. * fputwc_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * fputws: (libc)Simple Output. * fputws_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * fread: (libc)Block Input/Output. * fread_unlocked: (libc)Block Input/Output. * free: (libc)Freeing after Malloc. * freopen64: (libc)Opening Streams. * freopen: (libc)Opening Streams. * frexp: (libc)Normalization Functions. * frexpf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * frexpfN: (libc)Normalization Functions. * frexpfNx: (libc)Normalization Functions. * frexpl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * fromfp: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpxf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpxfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpxfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fromfpxl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * fscanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * fseek: (libc)File Positioning. * fseeko64: (libc)File Positioning. * fseeko: (libc)File Positioning. * fsetpos64: (libc)Portable Positioning. * fsetpos: (libc)Portable Positioning. * fstat64: (libc)Reading Attributes. * fstat: (libc)Reading Attributes. * fsub: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fsubl: (libc)Misc FP Arithmetic. * fsync: (libc)Synchronizing I/O. * ftell: (libc)File Positioning. * ftello64: (libc)File Positioning. * ftello: (libc)File Positioning. * ftruncate64: (libc)File Size. * ftruncate: (libc)File Size. * ftrylockfile: (libc)Streams and Threads. * ftw64: (libc)Working with Directory Trees. * ftw: (libc)Working with Directory Trees. * funlockfile: (libc)Streams and Threads. * futimes: (libc)File Times. * fwide: (libc)Streams and I18N. * fwprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * fwrite: (libc)Block Input/Output. * fwrite_unlocked: (libc)Block Input/Output. * fwscanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * gamma: (libc)Special Functions. * gammaf: (libc)Special Functions. * gammal: (libc)Special Functions. * gcvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * get_avphys_pages: (libc)Query Memory Parameters. * get_current_dir_name: (libc)Working Directory. * get_nprocs: (libc)Processor Resources. * get_nprocs_conf: (libc)Processor Resources. * get_phys_pages: (libc)Query Memory Parameters. * getauxval: (libc)Auxiliary Vector. * getc: (libc)Character Input. * getc_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * getchar: (libc)Character Input. * getchar_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * getcontext: (libc)System V contexts. * getcpu: (libc)CPU Affinity. * getcwd: (libc)Working Directory. * getdate: (libc)General Time String Parsing. * getdate_r: (libc)General Time String Parsing. * getdelim: (libc)Line Input. * getdents64: (libc)Low-level Directory Access. * getdomainnname: (libc)Host Identification. * getegid: (libc)Reading Persona. * getentropy: (libc)Unpredictable Bytes. * getenv: (libc)Environment Access. * geteuid: (libc)Reading Persona. * getfsent: (libc)fstab. * getfsfile: (libc)fstab. * getfsspec: (libc)fstab. * getgid: (libc)Reading Persona. * getgrent: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * getgrent_r: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * getgrgid: (libc)Lookup Group. * getgrgid_r: (libc)Lookup Group. * getgrnam: (libc)Lookup Group. * getgrnam_r: (libc)Lookup Group. * getgrouplist: (libc)Setting Groups. * getgroups: (libc)Reading Persona. * gethostbyaddr: (libc)Host Names. * gethostbyaddr_r: (libc)Host Names. * gethostbyname2: (libc)Host Names. * gethostbyname2_r: (libc)Host Names. * gethostbyname: (libc)Host Names. * gethostbyname_r: (libc)Host Names. * gethostent: (libc)Host Names. * gethostid: (libc)Host Identification. * gethostname: (libc)Host Identification. * getitimer: (libc)Setting an Alarm. * getline: (libc)Line Input. * getloadavg: (libc)Processor Resources. * getlogin: (libc)Who Logged In. * getmntent: (libc)mtab. * getmntent_r: (libc)mtab. * getnetbyaddr: (libc)Networks Database. * getnetbyname: (libc)Networks Database. * getnetent: (libc)Networks Database. * getnetgrent: (libc)Lookup Netgroup. * getnetgrent_r: (libc)Lookup Netgroup. * getopt: (libc)Using Getopt. * getopt_long: (libc)Getopt Long Options. * getopt_long_only: (libc)Getopt Long Options. * getpagesize: (libc)Query Memory Parameters. * getpass: (libc)getpass. * getpayload: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * getpayloadf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * getpayloadfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * getpayloadfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * getpayloadl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * getpeername: (libc)Who is Connected. * getpgid: (libc)Process Group Functions. * getpgrp: (libc)Process Group Functions. * getpid: (libc)Process Identification. * getppid: (libc)Process Identification. * getpriority: (libc)Traditional Scheduling Functions. * getprotobyname: (libc)Protocols Database. * getprotobynumber: (libc)Protocols Database. * getprotoent: (libc)Protocols Database. * getpt: (libc)Allocation. * getpwent: (libc)Scanning All Users. * getpwent_r: (libc)Scanning All Users. * getpwnam: (libc)Lookup User. * getpwnam_r: (libc)Lookup User. * getpwuid: (libc)Lookup User. * getpwuid_r: (libc)Lookup User. * getrandom: (libc)Unpredictable Bytes. * getrlimit64: (libc)Limits on Resources. * getrlimit: (libc)Limits on Resources. * getrusage: (libc)Resource Usage. * gets: (libc)Line Input. * getservbyname: (libc)Services Database. * getservbyport: (libc)Services Database. * getservent: (libc)Services Database. * getsid: (libc)Process Group Functions. * getsockname: (libc)Reading Address. * getsockopt: (libc)Socket Option Functions. * getsubopt: (libc)Suboptions. * gettext: (libc)Translation with gettext. * gettid: (libc)Process Identification. * gettimeofday: (libc)Getting the Time. * getuid: (libc)Reading Persona. * getumask: (libc)Setting Permissions. * getutent: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutent_r: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutid: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutid_r: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutline: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutline_r: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * getutmp: (libc)XPG Functions. * getutmpx: (libc)XPG Functions. * getutxent: (libc)XPG Functions. * getutxid: (libc)XPG Functions. * getutxline: (libc)XPG Functions. * getw: (libc)Character Input. * getwc: (libc)Character Input. * getwc_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * getwchar: (libc)Character Input. * getwchar_unlocked: (libc)Character Input. * getwd: (libc)Working Directory. * glob64: (libc)Calling Glob. * glob: (libc)Calling Glob. * globfree64: (libc)More Flags for Globbing. * globfree: (libc)More Flags for Globbing. * gmtime: (libc)Broken-down Time. * gmtime_r: (libc)Broken-down Time. * grantpt: (libc)Allocation. * gsignal: (libc)Signaling Yourself. * gtty: (libc)BSD Terminal Modes. * hasmntopt: (libc)mtab. * hcreate: (libc)Hash Search Function. * hcreate_r: (libc)Hash Search Function. * hdestroy: (libc)Hash Search Function. * hdestroy_r: (libc)Hash Search Function. * hsearch: (libc)Hash Search Function. * hsearch_r: (libc)Hash Search Function. * htonl: (libc)Byte Order. * htons: (libc)Byte Order. * hypot: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * hypotf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * hypotfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * hypotfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * hypotl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * iconv: (libc)Generic Conversion Interface. * iconv_close: (libc)Generic Conversion Interface. * iconv_open: (libc)Generic Conversion Interface. * if_freenameindex: (libc)Interface Naming. * if_indextoname: (libc)Interface Naming. * if_nameindex: (libc)Interface Naming. * if_nametoindex: (libc)Interface Naming. * ilogb: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ilogbf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ilogbfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ilogbfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * ilogbl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * imaxabs: (libc)Absolute Value. * imaxdiv: (libc)Integer Division. * in6addr_any: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * in6addr_loopback: (libc)Host Address Data Type. * index: (libc)Search Functions. * inet_addr: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_aton: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_lnaof: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_makeaddr: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_netof: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_network: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_ntoa: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_ntop: (libc)Host Address Functions. * inet_pton: (libc)Host Address Functions. * initgroups: (libc)Setting Groups. * initstate: (libc)BSD Random. * initstate_r: (libc)BSD Random. * innetgr: (libc)Netgroup Membership. * ioctl: (libc)IOCTLs. * isalnum: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isalpha: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isascii: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isatty: (libc)Is It a Terminal. * isblank: (libc)Classification of Characters. * iscanonical: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * iscntrl: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isdigit: (libc)Classification of Characters. * iseqsig: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * isfinite: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isgraph: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isgreater: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * isgreaterequal: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * isinf: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isinff: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isinfl: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isless: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * islessequal: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * islessgreater: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * islower: (libc)Classification of Characters. * isnan: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isnan: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isnanf: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isnanl: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isnormal: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isprint: (libc)Classification of Characters. * ispunct: (libc)Classification of Characters. * issignaling: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isspace: (libc)Classification of Characters. * issubnormal: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * isunordered: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * isupper: (libc)Classification of Characters. * iswalnum: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswalpha: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswblank: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswcntrl: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswctype: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswdigit: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswgraph: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswlower: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswprint: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswpunct: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswspace: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswupper: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * iswxdigit: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * isxdigit: (libc)Classification of Characters. * iszero: (libc)Floating Point Classes. * j0: (libc)Special Functions. * j0f: (libc)Special Functions. * j0fN: (libc)Special Functions. * j0fNx: (libc)Special Functions. * j0l: (libc)Special Functions. * j1: (libc)Special Functions. * j1f: (libc)Special Functions. * j1fN: (libc)Special Functions. * j1fNx: (libc)Special Functions. * j1l: (libc)Special Functions. * jn: (libc)Special Functions. * jnf: (libc)Special Functions. * jnfN: (libc)Special Functions. * jnfNx: (libc)Special Functions. * jnl: (libc)Special Functions. * jrand48: (libc)SVID Random. * jrand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * kill: (libc)Signaling Another Process. * killpg: (libc)Signaling Another Process. * l64a: (libc)Encode Binary Data. * labs: (libc)Absolute Value. * lcong48: (libc)SVID Random. * lcong48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * ldexp: (libc)Normalization Functions. * ldexpf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * ldexpfN: (libc)Normalization Functions. * ldexpfNx: (libc)Normalization Functions. * ldexpl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * ldiv: (libc)Integer Division. * lfind: (libc)Array Search Function. * lgamma: (libc)Special Functions. * lgamma_r: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammaf: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammafN: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammafN_r: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammafNx: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammafNx_r: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammaf_r: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammal: (libc)Special Functions. * lgammal_r: (libc)Special Functions. * link: (libc)Hard Links. * linkat: (libc)Hard Links. * lio_listio64: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * lio_listio: (libc)Asynchronous Reads/Writes. * listen: (libc)Listening. * llabs: (libc)Absolute Value. * lldiv: (libc)Integer Division. * llogb: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * llogbf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * llogbfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * llogbfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * llogbl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * llrint: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llrintf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llrintfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llrintfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llrintl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llround: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llroundf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llroundfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llroundfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * llroundl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * localeconv: (libc)The Lame Way to Locale Data. * localtime: (libc)Broken-down Time. * localtime_r: (libc)Broken-down Time. * log10: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log10f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log10fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log10fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log10l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log1p: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log1pf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log1pfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log1pfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log1pl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log2: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log2f: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log2fN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log2fNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log2l: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * log: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logb: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logbf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logbfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logbfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logbl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * login: (libc)Logging In and Out. * login_tty: (libc)Logging In and Out. * logl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * logout: (libc)Logging In and Out. * logwtmp: (libc)Logging In and Out. * longjmp: (libc)Non-Local Details. * lrand48: (libc)SVID Random. * lrand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * lrint: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lrintf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lrintfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lrintfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lrintl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lround: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lroundf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lroundfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lroundfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lroundl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * lsearch: (libc)Array Search Function. * lseek64: (libc)File Position Primitive. * lseek: (libc)File Position Primitive. * lstat64: (libc)Reading Attributes. * lstat: (libc)Reading Attributes. * lutimes: (libc)File Times. * madvise: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * makecontext: (libc)System V contexts. * mallinfo2: (libc)Statistics of Malloc. * malloc: (libc)Basic Allocation. * mallopt: (libc)Malloc Tunable Parameters. * mblen: (libc)Non-reentrant Character Conversion. * mbrlen: (libc)Converting a Character. * mbrtowc: (libc)Converting a Character. * mbsinit: (libc)Keeping the state. * mbsnrtowcs: (libc)Converting Strings. * mbsrtowcs: (libc)Converting Strings. * mbstowcs: (libc)Non-reentrant String Conversion. * mbtowc: (libc)Non-reentrant Character Conversion. * mcheck: (libc)Heap Consistency Checking. * memalign: (libc)Aligned Memory Blocks. * memccpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * memchr: (libc)Search Functions. * memcmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * memcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * memfd_create: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * memfrob: (libc)Obfuscating Data. * memmem: (libc)Search Functions. * memmove: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * mempcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * memrchr: (libc)Search Functions. * memset: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * mkdir: (libc)Creating Directories. * mkdtemp: (libc)Temporary Files. * mkfifo: (libc)FIFO Special Files. * mknod: (libc)Making Special Files. * mkstemp: (libc)Temporary Files. * mktemp: (libc)Temporary Files. * mktime: (libc)Broken-down Time. * mlock2: (libc)Page Lock Functions. * mlock: (libc)Page Lock Functions. * mlockall: (libc)Page Lock Functions. * mmap64: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * mmap: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * modf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * modff: (libc)Rounding Functions. * modffN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * modffNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * modfl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * mount: (libc)Mount-Unmount-Remount. * mprobe: (libc)Heap Consistency Checking. * mprotect: (libc)Memory Protection. * mrand48: (libc)SVID Random. * mrand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * mremap: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * msync: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * mtrace: (libc)Tracing malloc. * mtx_destroy: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * mtx_init: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * mtx_lock: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * mtx_timedlock: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * mtx_trylock: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * mtx_unlock: (libc)ISO C Mutexes. * munlock: (libc)Page Lock Functions. * munlockall: (libc)Page Lock Functions. * munmap: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * muntrace: (libc)Tracing malloc. * nan: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nanf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nanfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nanfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nanl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nanosleep: (libc)Sleeping. * nearbyint: (libc)Rounding Functions. * nearbyintf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * nearbyintfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * nearbyintfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * nearbyintl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * nextafter: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextafterf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextafterfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextafterfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextafterl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextdown: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextdownf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextdownfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextdownfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextdownl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nexttoward: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nexttowardf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nexttowardl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextup: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextupf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextupfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextupfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nextupl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * nftw64: (libc)Working with Directory Trees. * nftw: (libc)Working with Directory Trees. * ngettext: (libc)Advanced gettext functions. * nice: (libc)Traditional Scheduling Functions. * nl_langinfo: (libc)The Elegant and Fast Way. * nrand48: (libc)SVID Random. * nrand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * ntohl: (libc)Byte Order. * ntohs: (libc)Byte Order. * ntp_adjtime: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * ntp_gettime: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * obstack_1grow: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_1grow_fast: (libc)Extra Fast Growing. * obstack_alignment_mask: (libc)Obstacks Data Alignment. * obstack_alloc: (libc)Allocation in an Obstack. * obstack_base: (libc)Status of an Obstack. * obstack_blank: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_blank_fast: (libc)Extra Fast Growing. * obstack_chunk_size: (libc)Obstack Chunks. * obstack_copy0: (libc)Allocation in an Obstack. * obstack_copy: (libc)Allocation in an Obstack. * obstack_finish: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_free: (libc)Freeing Obstack Objects. * obstack_grow0: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_grow: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_init: (libc)Preparing for Obstacks. * obstack_int_grow: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_int_grow_fast: (libc)Extra Fast Growing. * obstack_next_free: (libc)Status of an Obstack. * obstack_object_size: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_object_size: (libc)Status of an Obstack. * obstack_printf: (libc)Dynamic Output. * obstack_ptr_grow: (libc)Growing Objects. * obstack_ptr_grow_fast: (libc)Extra Fast Growing. * obstack_room: (libc)Extra Fast Growing. * obstack_vprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * offsetof: (libc)Structure Measurement. * on_exit: (libc)Cleanups on Exit. * open64: (libc)Opening and Closing Files. * open: (libc)Opening and Closing Files. * open_memstream: (libc)String Streams. * opendir: (libc)Opening a Directory. * openlog: (libc)openlog. * openpty: (libc)Pseudo-Terminal Pairs. * parse_printf_format: (libc)Parsing a Template String. * pathconf: (libc)Pathconf. * pause: (libc)Using Pause. * pclose: (libc)Pipe to a Subprocess. * perror: (libc)Error Messages. * pipe: (libc)Creating a Pipe. * pkey_alloc: (libc)Memory Protection. * pkey_free: (libc)Memory Protection. * pkey_get: (libc)Memory Protection. * pkey_mprotect: (libc)Memory Protection. * pkey_set: (libc)Memory Protection. * popen: (libc)Pipe to a Subprocess. * posix_fallocate64: (libc)Storage Allocation. * posix_fallocate: (libc)Storage Allocation. * posix_memalign: (libc)Aligned Memory Blocks. * pow: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * powf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * powfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * powfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * powl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * pread64: (libc)I/O Primitives. * pread: (libc)I/O Primitives. * preadv2: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * preadv64: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * preadv64v2: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * preadv: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * printf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * printf_size: (libc)Predefined Printf Handlers. * printf_size_info: (libc)Predefined Printf Handlers. * psignal: (libc)Signal Messages. * pthread_attr_getsigmask_np: (libc)Initial Thread Signal Mask. * pthread_attr_setsigmask_np: (libc)Initial Thread Signal Mask. * pthread_clockjoin_np: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * pthread_cond_clockwait: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * pthread_getattr_default_np: (libc)Default Thread Attributes. * pthread_getspecific: (libc)Thread-specific Data. * pthread_key_create: (libc)Thread-specific Data. * pthread_key_delete: (libc)Thread-specific Data. * pthread_rwlock_clockrdlock: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * pthread_rwlock_clockwrlock: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * pthread_setattr_default_np: (libc)Default Thread Attributes. * pthread_setspecific: (libc)Thread-specific Data. * pthread_timedjoin_np: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * pthread_tryjoin_np: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * ptsname: (libc)Allocation. * ptsname_r: (libc)Allocation. * putc: (libc)Simple Output. * putc_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * putchar: (libc)Simple Output. * putchar_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * putenv: (libc)Environment Access. * putpwent: (libc)Writing a User Entry. * puts: (libc)Simple Output. * pututline: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * pututxline: (libc)XPG Functions. * putw: (libc)Simple Output. * putwc: (libc)Simple Output. * putwc_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * putwchar: (libc)Simple Output. * putwchar_unlocked: (libc)Simple Output. * pwrite64: (libc)I/O Primitives. * pwrite: (libc)I/O Primitives. * pwritev2: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * pwritev64: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * pwritev64v2: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * pwritev: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * qecvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * qecvt_r: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * qfcvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * qfcvt_r: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * qgcvt: (libc)System V Number Conversion. * qsort: (libc)Array Sort Function. * raise: (libc)Signaling Yourself. * rand: (libc)ISO Random. * rand_r: (libc)ISO Random. * random: (libc)BSD Random. * random_r: (libc)BSD Random. * rawmemchr: (libc)Search Functions. * read: (libc)I/O Primitives. * readdir64: (libc)Reading/Closing Directory. * readdir64_r: (libc)Reading/Closing Directory. * readdir: (libc)Reading/Closing Directory. * readdir_r: (libc)Reading/Closing Directory. * readlink: (libc)Symbolic Links. * readv: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * realloc: (libc)Changing Block Size. * reallocarray: (libc)Changing Block Size. * realpath: (libc)Symbolic Links. * recv: (libc)Receiving Data. * recvfrom: (libc)Receiving Datagrams. * recvmsg: (libc)Receiving Datagrams. * regcomp: (libc)POSIX Regexp Compilation. * regerror: (libc)Regexp Cleanup. * regexec: (libc)Matching POSIX Regexps. * regfree: (libc)Regexp Cleanup. * register_printf_function: (libc)Registering New Conversions. * remainder: (libc)Remainder Functions. * remainderf: (libc)Remainder Functions. * remainderfN: (libc)Remainder Functions. * remainderfNx: (libc)Remainder Functions. * remainderl: (libc)Remainder Functions. * remove: (libc)Deleting Files. * rename: (libc)Renaming Files. * rewind: (libc)File Positioning. * rewinddir: (libc)Random Access Directory. * rindex: (libc)Search Functions. * rint: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rintf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rintfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rintfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rintl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rmdir: (libc)Deleting Files. * round: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundeven: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundevenf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundevenfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundevenfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundevenl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * roundl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * rpmatch: (libc)Yes-or-No Questions. * sbrk: (libc)Resizing the Data Segment. * scalb: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbln: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalblnf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalblnfN: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalblnfNx: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalblnl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbn: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbnf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbnfN: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbnfNx: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scalbnl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * scandir64: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * scandir: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * scanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * sched_get_priority_max: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_get_priority_min: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_getaffinity: (libc)CPU Affinity. * sched_getparam: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_getscheduler: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_rr_get_interval: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_setaffinity: (libc)CPU Affinity. * sched_setparam: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_setscheduler: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * sched_yield: (libc)Basic Scheduling Functions. * secure_getenv: (libc)Environment Access. * seed48: (libc)SVID Random. * seed48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * seekdir: (libc)Random Access Directory. * select: (libc)Waiting for I/O. * sem_clockwait: (libc)Waiting with Explicit Clocks. * sem_close: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_destroy: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_getvalue: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_init: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_open: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_post: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_timedwait: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_trywait: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_unlink: (libc)Semaphores. * sem_wait: (libc)Semaphores. * semctl: (libc)Semaphores. * semget: (libc)Semaphores. * semop: (libc)Semaphores. * semtimedop: (libc)Semaphores. * send: (libc)Sending Data. * sendmsg: (libc)Receiving Datagrams. * sendto: (libc)Sending Datagrams. * setbuf: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * setbuffer: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * setcontext: (libc)System V contexts. * setdomainname: (libc)Host Identification. * setegid: (libc)Setting Groups. * setenv: (libc)Environment Access. * seteuid: (libc)Setting User ID. * setfsent: (libc)fstab. * setgid: (libc)Setting Groups. * setgrent: (libc)Scanning All Groups. * setgroups: (libc)Setting Groups. * sethostent: (libc)Host Names. * sethostid: (libc)Host Identification. * sethostname: (libc)Host Identification. * setitimer: (libc)Setting an Alarm. * setjmp: (libc)Non-Local Details. * setlinebuf: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * setlocale: (libc)Setting the Locale. * setlogmask: (libc)setlogmask. * setmntent: (libc)mtab. * setnetent: (libc)Networks Database. * setnetgrent: (libc)Lookup Netgroup. * setpayload: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadsig: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadsigf: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadsigfN: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadsigfNx: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpayloadsigl: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * setpgid: (libc)Process Group Functions. * setpgrp: (libc)Process Group Functions. * setpriority: (libc)Traditional Scheduling Functions. * setprotoent: (libc)Protocols Database. * setpwent: (libc)Scanning All Users. * setregid: (libc)Setting Groups. * setreuid: (libc)Setting User ID. * setrlimit64: (libc)Limits on Resources. * setrlimit: (libc)Limits on Resources. * setservent: (libc)Services Database. * setsid: (libc)Process Group Functions. * setsockopt: (libc)Socket Option Functions. * setstate: (libc)BSD Random. * setstate_r: (libc)BSD Random. * settimeofday: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * setuid: (libc)Setting User ID. * setutent: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * setutxent: (libc)XPG Functions. * setvbuf: (libc)Controlling Buffering. * shm_open: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * shm_unlink: (libc)Memory-mapped I/O. * shutdown: (libc)Closing a Socket. * sigabbrev_np: (libc)Signal Messages. * sigaction: (libc)Advanced Signal Handling. * sigaddset: (libc)Signal Sets. * sigaltstack: (libc)Signal Stack. * sigblock: (libc)BSD Signal Handling. * sigdelset: (libc)Signal Sets. * sigdescr_np: (libc)Signal Messages. * sigemptyset: (libc)Signal Sets. * sigfillset: (libc)Signal Sets. * siginterrupt: (libc)BSD Signal Handling. * sigismember: (libc)Signal Sets. * siglongjmp: (libc)Non-Local Exits and Signals. * sigmask: (libc)BSD Signal Handling. * signal: (libc)Basic Signal Handling. * signbit: (libc)FP Bit Twiddling. * significand: (libc)Normalization Functions. * significandf: (libc)Normalization Functions. * significandl: (libc)Normalization Functions. * sigpause: (libc)BSD Signal Handling. * sigpending: (libc)Checking for Pending Signals. * sigprocmask: (libc)Process Signal Mask. * sigsetjmp: (libc)Non-Local Exits and Signals. * sigsetmask: (libc)BSD Signal Handling. * sigstack: (libc)Signal Stack. * sigsuspend: (libc)Sigsuspend. * sin: (libc)Trig Functions. * sincos: (libc)Trig Functions. * sincosf: (libc)Trig Functions. * sincosfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * sincosfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * sincosl: (libc)Trig Functions. * sinf: (libc)Trig Functions. * sinfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * sinfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * sinh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * sinhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * sinhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * sinhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * sinhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * sinl: (libc)Trig Functions. * sleep: (libc)Sleeping. * snprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * socket: (libc)Creating a Socket. * socketpair: (libc)Socket Pairs. * sprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * sqrt: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * sqrtf: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * sqrtfN: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * sqrtfNx: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * sqrtl: (libc)Exponents and Logarithms. * srand48: (libc)SVID Random. * srand48_r: (libc)SVID Random. * srand: (libc)ISO Random. * srandom: (libc)BSD Random. * srandom_r: (libc)BSD Random. * sscanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * ssignal: (libc)Basic Signal Handling. * stat64: (libc)Reading Attributes. * stat: (libc)Reading Attributes. * stime: (libc)Setting and Adjusting the Time. * stpcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * stpncpy: (libc)Truncating Strings. * strcasecmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * strcasestr: (libc)Search Functions. * strcat: (libc)Concatenating Strings. * strchr: (libc)Search Functions. * strchrnul: (libc)Search Functions. * strcmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * strcoll: (libc)Collation Functions. * strcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * strcspn: (libc)Search Functions. * strdup: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * strdupa: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * strerror: (libc)Error Messages. * strerror_r: (libc)Error Messages. * strerrordesc_np: (libc)Error Messages. * strerrorname_np: (libc)Error Messages. * strfmon: (libc)Formatting Numbers. * strfromd: (libc)Printing of Floats. * strfromf: (libc)Printing of Floats. * strfromfN: (libc)Printing of Floats. * strfromfNx: (libc)Printing of Floats. * strfroml: (libc)Printing of Floats. * strfry: (libc)Shuffling Bytes. * strftime: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * strlen: (libc)String Length. * strncasecmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * strncat: (libc)Truncating Strings. * strncmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * strncpy: (libc)Truncating Strings. * strndup: (libc)Truncating Strings. * strndupa: (libc)Truncating Strings. * strnlen: (libc)String Length. * strpbrk: (libc)Search Functions. * strptime: (libc)Low-Level Time String Parsing. * strrchr: (libc)Search Functions. * strsep: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * strsignal: (libc)Signal Messages. * strspn: (libc)Search Functions. * strstr: (libc)Search Functions. * strtod: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * strtof: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * strtofN: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * strtofNx: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * strtoimax: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtok: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * strtok_r: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * strtol: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtold: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * strtoll: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtoq: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtoul: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtoull: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtoumax: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strtouq: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * strverscmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * strxfrm: (libc)Collation Functions. * stty: (libc)BSD Terminal Modes. * swapcontext: (libc)System V contexts. * swprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * swscanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * symlink: (libc)Symbolic Links. * sync: (libc)Synchronizing I/O. * syscall: (libc)System Calls. * sysconf: (libc)Sysconf Definition. * syslog: (libc)syslog; vsyslog. * system: (libc)Running a Command. * sysv_signal: (libc)Basic Signal Handling. * tan: (libc)Trig Functions. * tanf: (libc)Trig Functions. * tanfN: (libc)Trig Functions. * tanfNx: (libc)Trig Functions. * tanh: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * tanhf: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * tanhfN: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * tanhfNx: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * tanhl: (libc)Hyperbolic Functions. * tanl: (libc)Trig Functions. * tcdrain: (libc)Line Control. * tcflow: (libc)Line Control. * tcflush: (libc)Line Control. * tcgetattr: (libc)Mode Functions. * tcgetpgrp: (libc)Terminal Access Functions. * tcgetsid: (libc)Terminal Access Functions. * tcsendbreak: (libc)Line Control. * tcsetattr: (libc)Mode Functions. * tcsetpgrp: (libc)Terminal Access Functions. * tdelete: (libc)Tree Search Function. * tdestroy: (libc)Tree Search Function. * telldir: (libc)Random Access Directory. * tempnam: (libc)Temporary Files. * textdomain: (libc)Locating gettext catalog. * tfind: (libc)Tree Search Function. * tgamma: (libc)Special Functions. * tgammaf: (libc)Special Functions. * tgammafN: (libc)Special Functions. * tgammafNx: (libc)Special Functions. * tgammal: (libc)Special Functions. * tgkill: (libc)Signaling Another Process. * thrd_create: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_current: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_detach: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_equal: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_exit: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_join: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_sleep: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * thrd_yield: (libc)ISO C Thread Management. * time: (libc)Getting the Time. * timegm: (libc)Broken-down Time. * timelocal: (libc)Broken-down Time. * times: (libc)Processor Time. * tmpfile64: (libc)Temporary Files. * tmpfile: (libc)Temporary Files. * tmpnam: (libc)Temporary Files. * tmpnam_r: (libc)Temporary Files. * toascii: (libc)Case Conversion. * tolower: (libc)Case Conversion. * totalorder: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalorderf: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalorderfN: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalorderfNx: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalorderl: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalordermag: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalordermagf: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalordermagfN: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalordermagfNx: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * totalordermagl: (libc)FP Comparison Functions. * toupper: (libc)Case Conversion. * towctrans: (libc)Wide Character Case Conversion. * towlower: (libc)Wide Character Case Conversion. * towupper: (libc)Wide Character Case Conversion. * trunc: (libc)Rounding Functions. * truncate64: (libc)File Size. * truncate: (libc)File Size. * truncf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * truncfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * truncfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * truncl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * tsearch: (libc)Tree Search Function. * tss_create: (libc)ISO C Thread-local Storage. * tss_delete: (libc)ISO C Thread-local Storage. * tss_get: (libc)ISO C Thread-local Storage. * tss_set: (libc)ISO C Thread-local Storage. * ttyname: (libc)Is It a Terminal. * ttyname_r: (libc)Is It a Terminal. * twalk: (libc)Tree Search Function. * twalk_r: (libc)Tree Search Function. * tzset: (libc)Time Zone Functions. * ufromfp: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpxf: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpxfN: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpxfNx: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ufromfpxl: (libc)Rounding Functions. * ulimit: (libc)Limits on Resources. * umask: (libc)Setting Permissions. * umount2: (libc)Mount-Unmount-Remount. * umount: (libc)Mount-Unmount-Remount. * uname: (libc)Platform Type. * ungetc: (libc)How Unread. * ungetwc: (libc)How Unread. * unlink: (libc)Deleting Files. * unlockpt: (libc)Allocation. * unsetenv: (libc)Environment Access. * updwtmp: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * utime: (libc)File Times. * utimes: (libc)File Times. * utmpname: (libc)Manipulating the Database. * utmpxname: (libc)XPG Functions. * va_arg: (libc)Argument Macros. * va_copy: (libc)Argument Macros. * va_end: (libc)Argument Macros. * va_start: (libc)Argument Macros. * valloc: (libc)Aligned Memory Blocks. * vasprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * verr: (libc)Error Messages. * verrx: (libc)Error Messages. * versionsort64: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * versionsort: (libc)Scanning Directory Content. * vfork: (libc)Creating a Process. * vfprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vfscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * vfwprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vfwscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * vlimit: (libc)Limits on Resources. * vprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * vsnprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vsprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vsscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * vswprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vswscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * vsyslog: (libc)syslog; vsyslog. * vwarn: (libc)Error Messages. * vwarnx: (libc)Error Messages. * vwprintf: (libc)Variable Arguments Output. * vwscanf: (libc)Variable Arguments Input. * wait3: (libc)BSD Wait Functions. * wait4: (libc)Process Completion. * wait: (libc)Process Completion. * waitpid: (libc)Process Completion. * warn: (libc)Error Messages. * warnx: (libc)Error Messages. * wcpcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wcpncpy: (libc)Truncating Strings. * wcrtomb: (libc)Converting a Character. * wcscasecmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * wcscat: (libc)Concatenating Strings. * wcschr: (libc)Search Functions. * wcschrnul: (libc)Search Functions. * wcscmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * wcscoll: (libc)Collation Functions. * wcscpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wcscspn: (libc)Search Functions. * wcsdup: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wcsftime: (libc)Formatting Calendar Time. * wcslen: (libc)String Length. * wcsncasecmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * wcsncat: (libc)Truncating Strings. * wcsncmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * wcsncpy: (libc)Truncating Strings. * wcsnlen: (libc)String Length. * wcsnrtombs: (libc)Converting Strings. * wcspbrk: (libc)Search Functions. * wcsrchr: (libc)Search Functions. * wcsrtombs: (libc)Converting Strings. * wcsspn: (libc)Search Functions. * wcsstr: (libc)Search Functions. * wcstod: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * wcstof: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * wcstofN: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * wcstofNx: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * wcstoimax: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstok: (libc)Finding Tokens in a String. * wcstol: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstold: (libc)Parsing of Floats. * wcstoll: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstombs: (libc)Non-reentrant String Conversion. * wcstoq: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstoul: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstoull: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstoumax: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcstouq: (libc)Parsing of Integers. * wcswcs: (libc)Search Functions. * wcsxfrm: (libc)Collation Functions. * wctob: (libc)Converting a Character. * wctomb: (libc)Non-reentrant Character Conversion. * wctrans: (libc)Wide Character Case Conversion. * wctype: (libc)Classification of Wide Characters. * wmemchr: (libc)Search Functions. * wmemcmp: (libc)String/Array Comparison. * wmemcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wmemmove: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wmempcpy: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wmemset: (libc)Copying Strings and Arrays. * wordexp: (libc)Calling Wordexp. * wordfree: (libc)Calling Wordexp. * wprintf: (libc)Formatted Output Functions. * write: (libc)I/O Primitives. * writev: (libc)Scatter-Gather. * wscanf: (libc)Formatted Input Functions. * y0: (libc)Special Functions. * y0f: (libc)Special Functions. * y0fN: (libc)Special Functions. * y0fNx: (libc)Special Functions. * y0l: (libc)Special Functions. * y1: (libc)Special Functions. * y1f: (libc)Special Functions. * y1fN: (libc)Special Functions. * y1fNx: (libc)Special Functions. * y1l: (libc)Special Functions. * yn: (libc)Special Functions. * ynf: (libc)Special Functions. * ynfN: (libc)Special Functions. * ynfNx: (libc)Special Functions. * ynl: (libc)Special Functions. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY  File: libc.info, Node: Pseudo-Random Numbers, Next: FP Function Optimizations, Prev: Errors in Math Functions, Up: Mathematics 19.8 Pseudo-Random Numbers ========================== This section describes the GNU facilities for generating a series of pseudo-random numbers. The numbers generated are not truly random; typically, they form a sequence that repeats periodically, with a period so large that you can ignore it for ordinary purposes. The random number generator works by remembering a “seed” value which it uses to compute the next random number and also to compute a new seed. Although the generated numbers look unpredictable within one run of a program, the sequence of numbers is _exactly the same_ from one run to the next. This is because the initial seed is always the same. This is convenient when you are debugging a program, but it is unhelpful if you want the program to behave unpredictably. If you want a different pseudo-random series each time your program runs, you must specify a different seed each time. For ordinary purposes, basing the seed on the current time works well. For random numbers in cryptography, *note Unpredictable Bytes::. You can obtain repeatable sequences of numbers on a particular machine type by specifying the same initial seed value for the random number generator. There is no standard meaning for a particular seed value; the same seed, used in different C libraries or on different CPU types, will give you different random numbers. The GNU C Library supports the standard ISO C random number functions plus two other sets derived from BSD and SVID. The BSD and ISO C functions provide identical, somewhat limited functionality. If only a small number of random bits are required, we recommend you use the ISO C interface, ‘rand’ and ‘srand’. The SVID functions provide a more flexible interface, which allows better random number generator algorithms, provides more random bits (up to 48) per call, and can provide random floating-point numbers. These functions are required by the XPG standard and therefore will be present in all modern Unix systems. * Menu: * ISO Random:: ‘rand’ and friends. * BSD Random:: ‘random’ and friends. * SVID Random:: ‘drand48’ and friends.  File: libc.info, Node: ISO Random, Next: BSD Random, Up: Pseudo-Random Numbers 19.8.1 ISO C Random Number Functions ------------------------------------ This section describes the random number functions that are part of the ISO C standard. To use these facilities, you should include the header file ‘stdlib.h’ in your program. -- Macro: int RAND_MAX The value of this macro is an integer constant representing the largest value the ‘rand’ function can return. In the GNU C Library, it is ‘2147483647’, which is the largest signed integer representable in 32 bits. In other libraries, it may be as low as ‘32767’. -- Function: int rand (void) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘rand’ function returns the next pseudo-random number in the series. The value ranges from ‘0’ to ‘RAND_MAX’. -- Function: void srand (unsigned int SEED) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function establishes SEED as the seed for a new series of pseudo-random numbers. If you call ‘rand’ before a seed has been established with ‘srand’, it uses the value ‘1’ as a default seed. To produce a different pseudo-random series each time your program is run, do ‘srand (time (0))’. POSIX.1 extended the C standard functions to support reproducible random numbers in multi-threaded programs. However, the extension is badly designed and unsuitable for serious work. -- Function: int rand_r (unsigned int *SEED) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns a random number in the range 0 to ‘RAND_MAX’ just as ‘rand’ does. However, all its state is stored in the SEED argument. This means the RNG’s state can only have as many bits as the type ‘unsigned int’ has. This is far too few to provide a good RNG. If your program requires a reentrant RNG, we recommend you use the reentrant GNU extensions to the SVID random number generator. The POSIX.1 interface should only be used when the GNU extensions are not available.  File: libc.info, Node: BSD Random, Next: SVID Random, Prev: ISO Random, Up: Pseudo-Random Numbers 19.8.2 BSD Random Number Functions ---------------------------------- This section describes a set of random number generation functions that are derived from BSD. There is no advantage to using these functions with the GNU C Library; we support them for BSD compatibility only. The prototypes for these functions are in ‘stdlib.h’. -- Function: long int random (void) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns the next pseudo-random number in the sequence. The value returned ranges from ‘0’ to ‘2147483647’. *NB:* Temporarily this function was defined to return a ‘int32_t’ value to indicate that the return value always contains 32 bits even if ‘long int’ is wider. The standard demands it differently. Users must always be aware of the 32-bit limitation, though. -- Function: void srandom (unsigned int SEED) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘srandom’ function sets the state of the random number generator based on the integer SEED. If you supply a SEED value of ‘1’, this will cause ‘random’ to reproduce the default set of random numbers. To produce a different set of pseudo-random numbers each time your program runs, do ‘srandom (time (0))’. -- Function: char * initstate (unsigned int SEED, char *STATE, size_t SIZE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘initstate’ function is used to initialize the random number generator state. The argument STATE is an array of SIZE bytes, used to hold the state information. It is initialized based on SEED. The size must be between 8 and 256 bytes, and should be a power of two. The bigger the STATE array, the better. The return value is the previous value of the state information array. You can use this value later as an argument to ‘setstate’ to restore that state. -- Function: char * setstate (char *STATE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘setstate’ function restores the random number state information STATE. The argument must have been the result of a previous call to INITSTATE or SETSTATE. The return value is the previous value of the state information array. You can use this value later as an argument to ‘setstate’ to restore that state. If the function fails the return value is ‘NULL’. The four functions described so far in this section all work on a state which is shared by all threads. The state is not directly accessible to the user and can only be modified by these functions. This makes it hard to deal with situations where each thread should have its own pseudo-random number generator. The GNU C Library contains four additional functions which contain the state as an explicit parameter and therefore make it possible to handle thread-local PRNGs. Besides this there is no difference. In fact, the four functions already discussed are implemented internally using the following interfaces. The ‘stdlib.h’ header contains a definition of the following type: -- Data Type: struct random_data Objects of type ‘struct random_data’ contain the information necessary to represent the state of the PRNG. Although a complete definition of the type is present the type should be treated as opaque. The functions modifying the state follow exactly the already described functions. -- Function: int random_r (struct random_data *restrict BUF, int32_t *restrict RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buf | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘random_r’ function behaves exactly like the ‘random’ function except that it uses and modifies the state in the object pointed to by the first parameter instead of the global state. -- Function: int srandom_r (unsigned int SEED, struct random_data *BUF) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buf | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘srandom_r’ function behaves exactly like the ‘srandom’ function except that it uses and modifies the state in the object pointed to by the second parameter instead of the global state. -- Function: int initstate_r (unsigned int SEED, char *restrict STATEBUF, size_t STATELEN, struct random_data *restrict BUF) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buf | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘initstate_r’ function behaves exactly like the ‘initstate’ function except that it uses and modifies the state in the object pointed to by the fourth parameter instead of the global state. -- Function: int setstate_r (char *restrict STATEBUF, struct random_data *restrict BUF) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buf | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘setstate_r’ function behaves exactly like the ‘setstate’ function except that it uses and modifies the state in the object pointed to by the first parameter instead of the global state.  File: libc.info, Node: SVID Random, Prev: BSD Random, Up: Pseudo-Random Numbers 19.8.3 SVID Random Number Function ---------------------------------- The C library on SVID systems contains yet another kind of random number generator functions. They use a state of 48 bits of data. The user can choose among a collection of functions which return the random bits in different forms. Generally there are two kinds of function. The first uses a state of the random number generator which is shared among several functions and by all threads of the process. The second requires the user to handle the state. All functions have in common that they use the same congruential formula with the same constants. The formula is Y = (a * X + c) mod m where X is the state of the generator at the beginning and Y the state at the end. ‘a’ and ‘c’ are constants determining the way the generator works. By default they are a = 0x5DEECE66D = 25214903917 c = 0xb = 11 but they can also be changed by the user. ‘m’ is of course 2^48 since the state consists of a 48-bit array. The prototypes for these functions are in ‘stdlib.h’. -- Function: double drand48 (void) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns a ‘double’ value in the range of ‘0.0’ to ‘1.0’ (exclusive). The random bits are determined by the global state of the random number generator in the C library. Since the ‘double’ type according to IEEE 754 has a 52-bit mantissa this means 4 bits are not initialized by the random number generator. These are (of course) chosen to be the least significant bits and they are initialized to ‘0’. -- Function: double erand48 (unsigned short int XSUBI[3]) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns a ‘double’ value in the range of ‘0.0’ to ‘1.0’ (exclusive), similarly to ‘drand48’. The argument is an array describing the state of the random number generator. This function can be called subsequently since it updates the array to guarantee random numbers. The array should have been initialized before initial use to obtain reproducible results. -- Function: long int lrand48 (void) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘lrand48’ function returns an integer value in the range of ‘0’ to ‘2^31’ (exclusive). Even if the size of the ‘long int’ type can take more than 32 bits, no higher numbers are returned. The random bits are determined by the global state of the random number generator in the C library. -- Function: long int nrand48 (unsigned short int XSUBI[3]) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to the ‘lrand48’ function in that it returns a number in the range of ‘0’ to ‘2^31’ (exclusive) but the state of the random number generator used to produce the random bits is determined by the array provided as the parameter to the function. The numbers in the array are updated afterwards so that subsequent calls to this function yield different results (as is expected of a random number generator). The array should have been initialized before the first call to obtain reproducible results. -- Function: long int mrand48 (void) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘mrand48’ function is similar to ‘lrand48’. The only difference is that the numbers returned are in the range ‘-2^31’ to ‘2^31’ (exclusive). -- Function: long int jrand48 (unsigned short int XSUBI[3]) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘jrand48’ function is similar to ‘nrand48’. The only difference is that the numbers returned are in the range ‘-2^31’ to ‘2^31’ (exclusive). For the ‘xsubi’ parameter the same requirements are necessary. The internal state of the random number generator can be initialized in several ways. The methods differ in the completeness of the information provided. -- Function: void srand48 (long int SEEDVAL) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘srand48’ function sets the most significant 32 bits of the internal state of the random number generator to the least significant 32 bits of the SEEDVAL parameter. The lower 16 bits are initialized to the value ‘0x330E’. Even if the ‘long int’ type contains more than 32 bits only the lower 32 bits are used. Owing to this limitation, initialization of the state of this function is not very useful. But it makes it easy to use a construct like ‘srand48 (time (0))’. A side-effect of this function is that the values ‘a’ and ‘c’ from the internal state, which are used in the congruential formula, are reset to the default values given above. This is of importance once the user has called the ‘lcong48’ function (see below). -- Function: unsigned short int * seed48 (unsigned short int SEED16V[3]) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘seed48’ function initializes all 48 bits of the state of the internal random number generator from the contents of the parameter SEED16V. Here the lower 16 bits of the first element of SEED16V initialize the least significant 16 bits of the internal state, the lower 16 bits of ‘SEED16V[1]’ initialize the mid-order 16 bits of the state and the 16 lower bits of ‘SEED16V[2]’ initialize the most significant 16 bits of the state. Unlike ‘srand48’ this function lets the user initialize all 48 bits of the state. The value returned by ‘seed48’ is a pointer to an array containing the values of the internal state before the change. This might be useful to restart the random number generator at a certain state. Otherwise the value can simply be ignored. As for ‘srand48’, the values ‘a’ and ‘c’ from the congruential formula are reset to the default values. There is one more function to initialize the random number generator which enables you to specify even more information by allowing you to change the parameters in the congruential formula. -- Function: void lcong48 (unsigned short int PARAM[7]) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:drand48 | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘lcong48’ function allows the user to change the complete state of the random number generator. Unlike ‘srand48’ and ‘seed48’, this function also changes the constants in the congruential formula. From the seven elements in the array PARAM the least significant 16 bits of the entries ‘PARAM[0]’ to ‘PARAM[2]’ determine the initial state, the least significant 16 bits of ‘PARAM[3]’ to ‘PARAM[5]’ determine the 48 bit constant ‘a’ and ‘PARAM[6]’ determines the 16-bit value ‘c’. All the above functions have in common that they use the global parameters for the congruential formula. In multi-threaded programs it might sometimes be useful to have different parameters in different threads. For this reason all the above functions have a counterpart which works on a description of the random number generator in the user-supplied buffer instead of the global state. Please note that it is no problem if several threads use the global state if all threads use the functions which take a pointer to an array containing the state. The random numbers are computed following the same loop but if the state in the array is different all threads will obtain an individual random number generator. The user-supplied buffer must be of type ‘struct drand48_data’. This type should be regarded as opaque and not manipulated directly. -- Function: int drand48_r (struct drand48_data *BUFFER, double *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is equivalent to the ‘drand48’ function with the difference that it does not modify the global random number generator parameters but instead the parameters in the buffer supplied through the pointer BUFFER. The random number is returned in the variable pointed to by RESULT. The return value of the function indicates whether the call succeeded. If the value is less than ‘0’ an error occurred and ‘errno’ is set to indicate the problem. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int erand48_r (unsigned short int XSUBI[3], struct drand48_data *BUFFER, double *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘erand48_r’ function works like ‘erand48’, but in addition it takes an argument BUFFER which describes the random number generator. The state of the random number generator is taken from the ‘xsubi’ array, the parameters for the congruential formula from the global random number generator data. The random number is returned in the variable pointed to by RESULT. The return value is non-negative if the call succeeded. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int lrand48_r (struct drand48_data *BUFFER, long int *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to ‘lrand48’, but in addition it takes a pointer to a buffer describing the state of the random number generator just like ‘drand48’. If the return value of the function is non-negative the variable pointed to by RESULT contains the result. Otherwise an error occurred. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int nrand48_r (unsigned short int XSUBI[3], struct drand48_data *BUFFER, long int *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘nrand48_r’ function works like ‘nrand48’ in that it produces a random number in the range ‘0’ to ‘2^31’. But instead of using the global parameters for the congruential formula it uses the information from the buffer pointed to by BUFFER. The state is described by the values in XSUBI. If the return value is non-negative the variable pointed to by RESULT contains the result. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int mrand48_r (struct drand48_data *BUFFER, long int *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to ‘mrand48’ but like the other reentrant functions it uses the random number generator described by the value in the buffer pointed to by BUFFER. If the return value is non-negative the variable pointed to by RESULT contains the result. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int jrand48_r (unsigned short int XSUBI[3], struct drand48_data *BUFFER, long int *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘jrand48_r’ function is similar to ‘jrand48’. Like the other reentrant functions of this function family it uses the congruential formula parameters from the buffer pointed to by BUFFER. If the return value is non-negative the variable pointed to by RESULT contains the result. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. Before any of the above functions are used the buffer of type ‘struct drand48_data’ should be initialized. The easiest way to do this is to fill the whole buffer with null bytes, e.g. by memset (buffer, '\0', sizeof (struct drand48_data)); Using any of the reentrant functions of this family now will automatically initialize the random number generator to the default values for the state and the parameters of the congruential formula. The other possibility is to use any of the functions which explicitly initialize the buffer. Though it might be obvious how to initialize the buffer from looking at the parameter to the function, it is highly recommended to use these functions since the result might not always be what you expect. -- Function: int srand48_r (long int SEEDVAL, struct drand48_data *BUFFER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The description of the random number generator represented by the information in BUFFER is initialized similarly to what the function ‘srand48’ does. The state is initialized from the parameter SEEDVAL and the parameters for the congruential formula are initialized to their default values. If the return value is non-negative the function call succeeded. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int seed48_r (unsigned short int SEED16V[3], struct drand48_data *BUFFER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to ‘srand48_r’ but like ‘seed48’ it initializes all 48 bits of the state from the parameter SEED16V. If the return value is non-negative the function call succeeded. It does not return a pointer to the previous state of the random number generator like the ‘seed48’ function does. If the user wants to preserve the state for a later re-run s/he can copy the whole buffer pointed to by BUFFER. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs. -- Function: int lcong48_r (unsigned short int PARAM[7], struct drand48_data *BUFFER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe race:buffer | AS-Safe | AC-Unsafe corrupt | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function initializes all aspects of the random number generator described in BUFFER with the data in PARAM. Here it is especially true that the function does more than just copying the contents of PARAM and BUFFER. More work is required and therefore it is important to use this function rather than initializing the random number generator directly. If the return value is non-negative the function call succeeded. This function is a GNU extension and should not be used in portable programs.  File: libc.info, Node: FP Function Optimizations, Prev: Pseudo-Random Numbers, Up: Mathematics 19.9 Is Fast Code or Small Code preferred? ========================================== If an application uses many floating point functions it is often the case that the cost of the function calls themselves is not negligible. Modern processors can often execute the operations themselves very fast, but the function call disrupts the instruction pipeline. For this reason the GNU C Library provides optimizations for many of the frequently-used math functions. When GNU CC is used and the user activates the optimizer, several new inline functions and macros are defined. These new functions and macros have the same names as the library functions and so are used instead of the latter. In the case of inline functions the compiler will decide whether it is reasonable to use them, and this decision is usually correct. This means that no calls to the library functions may be necessary, and can increase the speed of generated code significantly. The drawback is that code size will increase, and the increase is not always negligible. There are two kinds of inline functions: those that give the same result as the library functions and others that might not set ‘errno’ and might have a reduced precision and/or argument range in comparison with the library functions. The latter inline functions are only available if the flag ‘-ffast-math’ is given to GNU CC. Not all hardware implements the entire IEEE 754 standard, and even if it does there may be a substantial performance penalty for using some of its features. For example, enabling traps on some processors forces the FPU to run un-pipelined, which can more than double calculation time.  File: libc.info, Node: Arithmetic, Next: Date and Time, Prev: Mathematics, Up: Top 20 Arithmetic Functions *********************** This chapter contains information about functions for doing basic arithmetic operations, such as splitting a float into its integer and fractional parts or retrieving the imaginary part of a complex value. These functions are declared in the header files ‘math.h’ and ‘complex.h’. * Menu: * Integers:: Basic integer types and concepts * Integer Division:: Integer division with guaranteed rounding. * Floating Point Numbers:: Basic concepts. IEEE 754. * Floating Point Classes:: The five kinds of floating-point number. * Floating Point Errors:: When something goes wrong in a calculation. * Rounding:: Controlling how results are rounded. * Control Functions:: Saving and restoring the FPU’s state. * Arithmetic Functions:: Fundamental operations provided by the library. * Complex Numbers:: The types. Writing complex constants. * Operations on Complex:: Projection, conjugation, decomposition. * Parsing of Numbers:: Converting strings to numbers. * Printing of Floats:: Converting floating-point numbers to strings. * System V Number Conversion:: An archaic way to convert numbers to strings.  File: libc.info, Node: Integers, Next: Integer Division, Up: Arithmetic 20.1 Integers ============= The C language defines several integer data types: integer, short integer, long integer, and character, all in both signed and unsigned varieties. The GNU C compiler extends the language to contain long long integers as well. The C integer types were intended to allow code to be portable among machines with different inherent data sizes (word sizes), so each type may have different ranges on different machines. The problem with this is that a program often needs to be written for a particular range of integers, and sometimes must be written for a particular size of storage, regardless of what machine the program runs on. To address this problem, the GNU C Library contains C type definitions you can use to declare integers that meet your exact needs. Because the GNU C Library header files are customized to a specific machine, your program source code doesn’t have to be. These ‘typedef’s are in ‘stdint.h’. If you require that an integer be represented in exactly N bits, use one of the following types, with the obvious mapping to bit size and signedness: • int8_t • int16_t • int32_t • int64_t • uint8_t • uint16_t • uint32_t • uint64_t If your C compiler and target machine do not allow integers of a certain size, the corresponding above type does not exist. If you don’t need a specific storage size, but want the smallest data structure with _at least_ N bits, use one of these: • int_least8_t • int_least16_t • int_least32_t • int_least64_t • uint_least8_t • uint_least16_t • uint_least32_t • uint_least64_t If you don’t need a specific storage size, but want the data structure that allows the fastest access while having at least N bits (and among data structures with the same access speed, the smallest one), use one of these: • int_fast8_t • int_fast16_t • int_fast32_t • int_fast64_t • uint_fast8_t • uint_fast16_t • uint_fast32_t • uint_fast64_t If you want an integer with the widest range possible on the platform on which it is being used, use one of the following. If you use these, you should write code that takes into account the variable size and range of the integer. • intmax_t • uintmax_t The GNU C Library also provides macros that tell you the maximum and minimum possible values for each integer data type. The macro names follow these examples: ‘INT32_MAX’, ‘UINT8_MAX’, ‘INT_FAST32_MIN’, ‘INT_LEAST64_MIN’, ‘UINTMAX_MAX’, ‘INTMAX_MAX’, ‘INTMAX_MIN’. Note that there are no macros for unsigned integer minima. These are always zero. Similiarly, there are macros such as ‘INTMAX_WIDTH’ for the width of these types. Those macros for integer type widths come from TS 18661-1:2014. There are similar macros for use with C’s built in integer types which should come with your C compiler. These are described in *note Data Type Measurements::. Don’t forget you can use the C ‘sizeof’ function with any of these data types to get the number of bytes of storage each uses.  File: libc.info, Node: Integer Division, Next: Floating Point Numbers, Prev: Integers, Up: Arithmetic 20.2 Integer Division ===================== This section describes functions for performing integer division. These functions are redundant when GNU CC is used, because in GNU C the ‘/’ operator always rounds towards zero. But in other C implementations, ‘/’ may round differently with negative arguments. ‘div’ and ‘ldiv’ are useful because they specify how to round the quotient: towards zero. The remainder has the same sign as the numerator. These functions are specified to return a result R such that the value ‘R.quot*DENOMINATOR + R.rem’ equals NUMERATOR. To use these facilities, you should include the header file ‘stdlib.h’ in your program. -- Data Type: div_t This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the ‘div’ function. It has the following members: ‘int quot’ The quotient from the division. ‘int rem’ The remainder from the division. -- Function: div_t div (int NUMERATOR, int DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The function ‘div’ computes the quotient and remainder from the division of NUMERATOR by DENOMINATOR, returning the result in a structure of type ‘div_t’. If the result cannot be represented (as in a division by zero), the behavior is undefined. Here is an example, albeit not a very useful one. div_t result; result = div (20, -6); Now ‘result.quot’ is ‘-3’ and ‘result.rem’ is ‘2’. -- Data Type: ldiv_t This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the ‘ldiv’ function. It has the following members: ‘long int quot’ The quotient from the division. ‘long int rem’ The remainder from the division. (This is identical to ‘div_t’ except that the components are of type ‘long int’ rather than ‘int’.) -- Function: ldiv_t ldiv (long int NUMERATOR, long int DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘ldiv’ function is similar to ‘div’, except that the arguments are of type ‘long int’ and the result is returned as a structure of type ‘ldiv_t’. -- Data Type: lldiv_t This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the ‘lldiv’ function. It has the following members: ‘long long int quot’ The quotient from the division. ‘long long int rem’ The remainder from the division. (This is identical to ‘div_t’ except that the components are of type ‘long long int’ rather than ‘int’.) -- Function: lldiv_t lldiv (long long int NUMERATOR, long long int DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘lldiv’ function is like the ‘div’ function, but the arguments are of type ‘long long int’ and the result is returned as a structure of type ‘lldiv_t’. The ‘lldiv’ function was added in ISO C99. -- Data Type: imaxdiv_t This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the ‘imaxdiv’ function. It has the following members: ‘intmax_t quot’ The quotient from the division. ‘intmax_t rem’ The remainder from the division. (This is identical to ‘div_t’ except that the components are of type ‘intmax_t’ rather than ‘int’.) See *note Integers:: for a description of the ‘intmax_t’ type. -- Function: imaxdiv_t imaxdiv (intmax_t NUMERATOR, intmax_t DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘imaxdiv’ function is like the ‘div’ function, but the arguments are of type ‘intmax_t’ and the result is returned as a structure of type ‘imaxdiv_t’. See *note Integers:: for a description of the ‘intmax_t’ type. The ‘imaxdiv’ function was added in ISO C99.  File: libc.info, Node: Floating Point Numbers, Next: Floating Point Classes, Prev: Integer Division, Up: Arithmetic 20.3 Floating Point Numbers =========================== Most computer hardware has support for two different kinds of numbers: integers (...-3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3...) and floating-point numbers. Floating-point numbers have three parts: the “mantissa”, the “exponent”, and the “sign bit”. The real number represented by a floating-point value is given by (s ? -1 : 1) * 2^e * M where s is the sign bit, e the exponent, and M the mantissa. *Note Floating Point Concepts::, for details. (It is possible to have a different “base” for the exponent, but all modern hardware uses 2.) Floating-point numbers can represent a finite subset of the real numbers. While this subset is large enough for most purposes, it is important to remember that the only reals that can be represented exactly are rational numbers that have a terminating binary expansion shorter than the width of the mantissa. Even simple fractions such as 1/5 can only be approximated by floating point. Mathematical operations and functions frequently need to produce values that are not representable. Often these values can be approximated closely enough for practical purposes, but sometimes they can’t. Historically there was no way to tell when the results of a calculation were inaccurate. Modern computers implement the IEEE 754 standard for numerical computations, which defines a framework for indicating to the program when the results of calculation are not trustworthy. This framework consists of a set of “exceptions” that indicate why a result could not be represented, and the special values “infinity” and “not a number” (NaN).  File: libc.info, Node: Floating Point Classes, Next: Floating Point Errors, Prev: Floating Point Numbers, Up: Arithmetic 20.4 Floating-Point Number Classification Functions =================================================== ISO C99 defines macros that let you determine what sort of floating-point number a variable holds. -- Macro: int fpclassify (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This is a generic macro which works on all floating-point types and which returns a value of type ‘int’. The possible values are: ‘FP_NAN’ The floating-point number X is “Not a Number” (*note Infinity and NaN::) ‘FP_INFINITE’ The value of X is either plus or minus infinity (*note Infinity and NaN::) ‘FP_ZERO’ The value of X is zero. In floating-point formats like IEEE 754, where zero can be signed, this value is also returned if X is negative zero. ‘FP_SUBNORMAL’ Numbers whose absolute value is too small to be represented in the normal format are represented in an alternate, “denormalized” format (*note Floating Point Concepts::). This format is less precise but can represent values closer to zero. ‘fpclassify’ returns this value for values of X in this alternate format. ‘FP_NORMAL’ This value is returned for all other values of X. It indicates that there is nothing special about the number. ‘fpclassify’ is most useful if more than one property of a number must be tested. There are more specific macros which only test one property at a time. Generally these macros execute faster than ‘fpclassify’, since there is special hardware support for them. You should therefore use the specific macros whenever possible. -- Macro: int iscanonical (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. In some floating-point formats, some values have canonical (preferred) and noncanonical encodings (for IEEE interchange binary formats, all encodings are canonical). This macro returns a nonzero value if X has a canonical encoding. It is from TS 18661-1:2014. Note that some formats have multiple encodings of a value which are all equally canonical; ‘iscanonical’ returns a nonzero value for all such encodings. Also, formats may have encodings that do not correspond to any valid value of the type. In ISO C terms these are “trap representations”; in the GNU C Library, ‘iscanonical’ returns zero for such encodings. -- Macro: int isfinite (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is finite: not plus or minus infinity, and not NaN. It is equivalent to (fpclassify (x) != FP_NAN && fpclassify (x) != FP_INFINITE) ‘isfinite’ is implemented as a macro which accepts any floating-point type. -- Macro: int isnormal (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is finite and normalized. It is equivalent to (fpclassify (x) == FP_NORMAL) -- Macro: int isnan (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is NaN. It is equivalent to (fpclassify (x) == FP_NAN) -- Macro: int issignaling (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is a signaling NaN (sNaN). It is from TS 18661-1:2014. -- Macro: int issubnormal (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is subnormal. It is from TS 18661-1:2014. -- Macro: int iszero (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro returns a nonzero value if X is zero. It is from TS 18661-1:2014. Another set of floating-point classification functions was provided by BSD. The GNU C Library also supports these functions; however, we recommend that you use the ISO C99 macros in new code. Those are standard and will be available more widely. Also, since they are macros, you do not have to worry about the type of their argument. -- Function: int isinf (double X) -- Function: int isinff (float X) -- Function: int isinfl (long double X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns ‘-1’ if X represents negative infinity, ‘1’ if X represents positive infinity, and ‘0’ otherwise. -- Function: int isnan (double X) -- Function: int isnanf (float X) -- Function: int isnanl (long double X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns a nonzero value if X is a “not a number” value, and zero otherwise. *NB:* The ‘isnan’ macro defined by ISO C99 overrides the BSD function. This is normally not a problem, because the two routines behave identically. However, if you really need to get the BSD function for some reason, you can write (isnan) (x) -- Function: int finite (double X) -- Function: int finitef (float X) -- Function: int finitel (long double X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns a nonzero value if X is neither infinite nor a “not a number” value, and zero otherwise. *Portability Note:* The functions listed in this section are BSD extensions.  File: libc.info, Node: Floating Point Errors, Next: Rounding, Prev: Floating Point Classes, Up: Arithmetic 20.5 Errors in Floating-Point Calculations ========================================== * Menu: * FP Exceptions:: IEEE 754 math exceptions and how to detect them. * Infinity and NaN:: Special values returned by calculations. * Status bit operations:: Checking for exceptions after the fact. * Math Error Reporting:: How the math functions report errors.  File: libc.info, Node: FP Exceptions, Next: Infinity and NaN, Up: Floating Point Errors 20.5.1 FP Exceptions -------------------- The IEEE 754 standard defines five “exceptions” that can occur during a calculation. Each corresponds to a particular sort of error, such as overflow. When exceptions occur (when exceptions are “raised”, in the language of the standard), one of two things can happen. By default the exception is simply noted in the floating-point “status word”, and the program continues as if nothing had happened. The operation produces a default value, which depends on the exception (see the table below). Your program can check the status word to find out which exceptions happened. Alternatively, you can enable “traps” for exceptions. In that case, when an exception is raised, your program will receive the ‘SIGFPE’ signal. The default action for this signal is to terminate the program. *Note Signal Handling::, for how you can change the effect of the signal. The exceptions defined in IEEE 754 are: ‘Invalid Operation’ This exception is raised if the given operands are invalid for the operation to be performed. Examples are (see IEEE 754, section 7): 1. Addition or subtraction: oo - oo. (But oo + oo = oo). 2. Multiplication: 0 * oo. 3. Division: 0/0 or oo/oo. 4. Remainder: x REM y, where y is zero or x is infinite. 5. Square root if the operand is less than zero. More generally, any mathematical function evaluated outside its domain produces this exception. 6. Conversion of a floating-point number to an integer or decimal string, when the number cannot be represented in the target format (due to overflow, infinity, or NaN). 7. Conversion of an unrecognizable input string. 8. Comparison via predicates involving < or >, when one or other of the operands is NaN. You can prevent this exception by using the unordered comparison functions instead; see *note FP Comparison Functions::. If the exception does not trap, the result of the operation is NaN. ‘Division by Zero’ This exception is raised when a finite nonzero number is divided by zero. If no trap occurs the result is either +oo or -oo, depending on the signs of the operands. ‘Overflow’ This exception is raised whenever the result cannot be represented as a finite value in the precision format of the destination. If no trap occurs the result depends on the sign of the intermediate result and the current rounding mode (IEEE 754, section 7.3): 1. Round to nearest carries all overflows to oo with the sign of the intermediate result. 2. Round toward 0 carries all overflows to the largest representable finite number with the sign of the intermediate result. 3. Round toward -oo carries positive overflows to the largest representable finite number and negative overflows to -oo. 4. Round toward oo carries negative overflows to the most negative representable finite number and positive overflows to oo. Whenever the overflow exception is raised, the inexact exception is also raised. ‘Underflow’ The underflow exception is raised when an intermediate result is too small to be calculated accurately, or if the operation’s result rounded to the destination precision is too small to be normalized. When no trap is installed for the underflow exception, underflow is signaled (via the underflow flag) only when both tininess and loss of accuracy have been detected. If no trap handler is installed the operation continues with an imprecise small value, or zero if the destination precision cannot hold the small exact result. ‘Inexact’ This exception is signalled if a rounded result is not exact (such as when calculating the square root of two) or a result overflows without an overflow trap.  File: libc.info, Node: Infinity and NaN, Next: Status bit operations, Prev: FP Exceptions, Up: Floating Point Errors 20.5.2 Infinity and NaN ----------------------- IEEE 754 floating point numbers can represent positive or negative infinity, and “NaN” (not a number). These three values arise from calculations whose result is undefined or cannot be represented accurately. You can also deliberately set a floating-point variable to any of them, which is sometimes useful. Some examples of calculations that produce infinity or NaN: 1/0 = oo log (0) = -oo sqrt (-1) = NaN When a calculation produces any of these values, an exception also occurs; see *note FP Exceptions::. The basic operations and math functions all accept infinity and NaN and produce sensible output. Infinities propagate through calculations as one would expect: for example, 2 + oo = oo, 4/oo = 0, atan (oo) = pi/2. NaN, on the other hand, infects any calculation that involves it. Unless the calculation would produce the same result no matter what real value replaced NaN, the result is NaN. In comparison operations, positive infinity is larger than all values except itself and NaN, and negative infinity is smaller than all values except itself and NaN. NaN is “unordered”: it is not equal to, greater than, or less than anything, _including itself_. ‘x == x’ is false if the value of ‘x’ is NaN. You can use this to test whether a value is NaN or not, but the recommended way to test for NaN is with the ‘isnan’ function (*note Floating Point Classes::). In addition, ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘<=’, and ‘>=’ will raise an exception when applied to NaNs. ‘math.h’ defines macros that allow you to explicitly set a variable to infinity or NaN. -- Macro: float INFINITY An expression representing positive infinity. It is equal to the value produced by mathematical operations like ‘1.0 / 0.0’. ‘-INFINITY’ represents negative infinity. You can test whether a floating-point value is infinite by comparing it to this macro. However, this is not recommended; you should use the ‘isfinite’ macro instead. *Note Floating Point Classes::. This macro was introduced in the ISO C99 standard. -- Macro: float NAN An expression representing a value which is “not a number”. This macro is a GNU extension, available only on machines that support the “not a number” value—that is to say, on all machines that support IEEE floating point. You can use ‘#ifdef NAN’ to test whether the machine supports NaN. (Of course, you must arrange for GNU extensions to be visible, such as by defining ‘_GNU_SOURCE’, and then you must include ‘math.h’.) -- Macro: float SNANF -- Macro: double SNAN -- Macro: long double SNANL -- Macro: _FloatN SNANFN -- Macro: _FloatNx SNANFNx These macros, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, are constant expressions for signaling NaNs. -- Macro: int FE_SNANS_ALWAYS_SIGNAL This macro, defined by TS 18661-1:2014, is defined to ‘1’ in ‘fenv.h’ to indicate that functions and operations with signaling NaN inputs and floating-point results always raise the invalid exception and return a quiet NaN, even in cases (such as ‘fmax’, ‘hypot’ and ‘pow’) where a quiet NaN input can produce a non-NaN result. Because some compiler optimizations may not handle signaling NaNs correctly, this macro is only defined if compiler support for signaling NaNs is enabled. That support can be enabled with the GCC option ‘-fsignaling-nans’. IEEE 754 also allows for another unusual value: negative zero. This value is produced when you divide a positive number by negative infinity, or when a negative result is smaller than the limits of representation.  File: libc.info, Node: Status bit operations, Next: Math Error Reporting, Prev: Infinity and NaN, Up: Floating Point Errors 20.5.3 Examining the FPU status word ------------------------------------ ISO C99 defines functions to query and manipulate the floating-point status word. You can use these functions to check for untrapped exceptions when it’s convenient, rather than worrying about them in the middle of a calculation. These constants represent the various IEEE 754 exceptions. Not all FPUs report all the different exceptions. Each constant is defined if and only if the FPU you are compiling for supports that exception, so you can test for FPU support with ‘#ifdef’. They are defined in ‘fenv.h’. ‘FE_INEXACT’ The inexact exception. ‘FE_DIVBYZERO’ The divide by zero exception. ‘FE_UNDERFLOW’ The underflow exception. ‘FE_OVERFLOW’ The overflow exception. ‘FE_INVALID’ The invalid exception. The macro ‘FE_ALL_EXCEPT’ is the bitwise OR of all exception macros which are supported by the FP implementation. These functions allow you to clear exception flags, test for exceptions, and save and restore the set of exceptions flagged. -- Function: int feclearexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe !posix | AC-Safe !posix | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function clears all of the supported exception flags indicated by EXCEPTS. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int feraiseexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function raises the supported exceptions indicated by EXCEPTS. If more than one exception bit in EXCEPTS is set the order in which the exceptions are raised is undefined except that overflow (‘FE_OVERFLOW’) or underflow (‘FE_UNDERFLOW’) are raised before inexact (‘FE_INEXACT’). Whether for overflow or underflow the inexact exception is also raised is also implementation dependent. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int fesetexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function sets the supported exception flags indicated by EXCEPTS, like ‘feraiseexcept’, but without causing enabled traps to be taken. ‘fesetexcept’ is from TS 18661-1:2014. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int fetestexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Test whether the exception flags indicated by the parameter EXCEPT are currently set. If any of them are, a nonzero value is returned which specifies which exceptions are set. Otherwise the result is zero. To understand these functions, imagine that the status word is an integer variable named STATUS. ‘feclearexcept’ is then equivalent to ‘status &= ~excepts’ and ‘fetestexcept’ is equivalent to ‘(status & excepts)’. The actual implementation may be very different, of course. Exception flags are only cleared when the program explicitly requests it, by calling ‘feclearexcept’. If you want to check for exceptions from a set of calculations, you should clear all the flags first. Here is a simple example of the way to use ‘fetestexcept’: { double f; int raised; feclearexcept (FE_ALL_EXCEPT); f = compute (); raised = fetestexcept (FE_OVERFLOW | FE_INVALID); if (raised & FE_OVERFLOW) { /* ... */ } if (raised & FE_INVALID) { /* ... */ } /* ... */ } You cannot explicitly set bits in the status word. You can, however, save the entire status word and restore it later. This is done with the following functions: -- Function: int fegetexceptflag (fexcept_t *FLAGP, int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function stores in the variable pointed to by FLAGP an implementation-defined value representing the current setting of the exception flags indicated by EXCEPTS. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int fesetexceptflag (const fexcept_t *FLAGP, int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function restores the flags for the exceptions indicated by EXCEPTS to the values stored in the variable pointed to by FLAGP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. Note that the value stored in ‘fexcept_t’ bears no resemblance to the bit mask returned by ‘fetestexcept’. The type may not even be an integer. Do not attempt to modify an ‘fexcept_t’ variable. -- Function: int fetestexceptflag (const fexcept_t *FLAGP, int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Test whether the exception flags indicated by the parameter EXCEPTS are set in the variable pointed to by FLAGP. If any of them are, a nonzero value is returned which specifies which exceptions are set. Otherwise the result is zero. ‘fetestexceptflag’ is from TS 18661-1:2014.  File: libc.info, Node: Math Error Reporting, Prev: Status bit operations, Up: Floating Point Errors 20.5.4 Error Reporting by Mathematical Functions ------------------------------------------------ Many of the math functions are defined only over a subset of the real or complex numbers. Even if they are mathematically defined, their result may be larger or smaller than the range representable by their return type without loss of accuracy. These are known as “domain errors”, “overflows”, and “underflows”, respectively. Math functions do several things when one of these errors occurs. In this manual we will refer to the complete response as “signalling” a domain error, overflow, or underflow. When a math function suffers a domain error, it raises the invalid exception and returns NaN. It also sets ‘errno’ to ‘EDOM’; this is for compatibility with old systems that do not support IEEE 754 exception handling. Likewise, when overflow occurs, math functions raise the overflow exception and, in the default rounding mode, return oo or -oo as appropriate (in other rounding modes, the largest finite value of the appropriate sign is returned when appropriate for that rounding mode). They also set ‘errno’ to ‘ERANGE’ if returning oo or -oo; ‘errno’ may or may not be set to ‘ERANGE’ when a finite value is returned on overflow. When underflow occurs, the underflow exception is raised, and zero (appropriately signed) or a subnormal value, as appropriate for the mathematical result of the function and the rounding mode, is returned. ‘errno’ may be set to ‘ERANGE’, but this is not guaranteed; it is intended that the GNU C Library should set it when the underflow is to an appropriately signed zero, but not necessarily for other underflows. When a math function has an argument that is a signaling NaN, the GNU C Library does not consider this a domain error, so ‘errno’ is unchanged, but the invalid exception is still raised (except for a few functions that are specified to handle signaling NaNs differently). Some of the math functions are defined mathematically to result in a complex value over parts of their domains. The most familiar example of this is taking the square root of a negative number. The complex math functions, such as ‘csqrt’, will return the appropriate complex value in this case. The real-valued functions, such as ‘sqrt’, will signal a domain error. Some older hardware does not support infinities. On that hardware, overflows instead return a particular very large number (usually the largest representable number). ‘math.h’ defines macros you can use to test for overflow on both old and new hardware. -- Macro: double HUGE_VAL -- Macro: float HUGE_VALF -- Macro: long double HUGE_VALL -- Macro: _FloatN HUGE_VAL_FN -- Macro: _FloatNx HUGE_VAL_FNx An expression representing a particular very large number. On machines that use IEEE 754 floating point format, ‘HUGE_VAL’ is infinity. On other machines, it’s typically the largest positive number that can be represented. Mathematical functions return the appropriately typed version of ‘HUGE_VAL’ or ‘−HUGE_VAL’ when the result is too large to be represented.  File: libc.info, Node: Rounding, Next: Control Functions, Prev: Floating Point Errors, Up: Arithmetic 20.6 Rounding Modes =================== Floating-point calculations are carried out internally with extra precision, and then rounded to fit into the destination type. This ensures that results are as precise as the input data. IEEE 754 defines four possible rounding modes: Round to nearest. This is the default mode. It should be used unless there is a specific need for one of the others. In this mode results are rounded to the nearest representable value. If the result is midway between two representable values, the even representable is chosen. “Even” here means the lowest-order bit is zero. This rounding mode prevents statistical bias and guarantees numeric stability: round-off errors in a lengthy calculation will remain smaller than half of ‘FLT_EPSILON’. Round toward plus Infinity. All results are rounded to the smallest representable value which is greater than the result. Round toward minus Infinity. All results are rounded to the largest representable value which is less than the result. Round toward zero. All results are rounded to the largest representable value whose magnitude is less than that of the result. In other words, if the result is negative it is rounded up; if it is positive, it is rounded down. ‘fenv.h’ defines constants which you can use to refer to the various rounding modes. Each one will be defined if and only if the FPU supports the corresponding rounding mode. ‘FE_TONEAREST’ Round to nearest. ‘FE_UPWARD’ Round toward +oo. ‘FE_DOWNWARD’ Round toward -oo. ‘FE_TOWARDZERO’ Round toward zero. Underflow is an unusual case. Normally, IEEE 754 floating point numbers are always normalized (*note Floating Point Concepts::). Numbers smaller than 2^r (where r is the minimum exponent, ‘FLT_MIN_RADIX-1’ for FLOAT) cannot be represented as normalized numbers. Rounding all such numbers to zero or 2^r would cause some algorithms to fail at 0. Therefore, they are left in denormalized form. That produces loss of precision, since some bits of the mantissa are stolen to indicate the decimal point. If a result is too small to be represented as a denormalized number, it is rounded to zero. However, the sign of the result is preserved; if the calculation was negative, the result is “negative zero”. Negative zero can also result from some operations on infinity, such as 4/-oo. At any time, one of the above four rounding modes is selected. You can find out which one with this function: -- Function: int fegetround (void) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Returns the currently selected rounding mode, represented by one of the values of the defined rounding mode macros. To change the rounding mode, use this function: -- Function: int fesetround (int ROUND) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Changes the currently selected rounding mode to ROUND. If ROUND does not correspond to one of the supported rounding modes nothing is changed. ‘fesetround’ returns zero if it changed the rounding mode, or a nonzero value if the mode is not supported. You should avoid changing the rounding mode if possible. It can be an expensive operation; also, some hardware requires you to compile your program differently for it to work. The resulting code may run slower. See your compiler documentation for details.  File: libc.info, Node: Control Functions, Next: Arithmetic Functions, Prev: Rounding, Up: Arithmetic 20.7 Floating-Point Control Functions ===================================== IEEE 754 floating-point implementations allow the programmer to decide whether traps will occur for each of the exceptions, by setting bits in the “control word”. In C, traps result in the program receiving the ‘SIGFPE’ signal; see *note Signal Handling::. *NB:* IEEE 754 says that trap handlers are given details of the exceptional situation, and can set the result value. C signals do not provide any mechanism to pass this information back and forth. Trapping exceptions in C is therefore not very useful. It is sometimes necessary to save the state of the floating-point unit while you perform some calculation. The library provides functions which save and restore the exception flags, the set of exceptions that generate traps, and the rounding mode. This information is known as the “floating-point environment”. The functions to save and restore the floating-point environment all use a variable of type ‘fenv_t’ to store information. This type is defined in ‘fenv.h’. Its size and contents are implementation-defined. You should not attempt to manipulate a variable of this type directly. To save the state of the FPU, use one of these functions: -- Function: int fegetenv (fenv_t *ENVP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Store the floating-point environment in the variable pointed to by ENVP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int feholdexcept (fenv_t *ENVP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Store the current floating-point environment in the object pointed to by ENVP. Then clear all exception flags, and set the FPU to trap no exceptions. Not all FPUs support trapping no exceptions; if ‘feholdexcept’ cannot set this mode, it returns nonzero value. If it succeeds, it returns zero. The functions which restore the floating-point environment can take these kinds of arguments: • Pointers to ‘fenv_t’ objects, which were initialized previously by a call to ‘fegetenv’ or ‘feholdexcept’. • The special macro ‘FE_DFL_ENV’ which represents the floating-point environment as it was available at program start. • Implementation defined macros with names starting with ‘FE_’ and having type ‘fenv_t *’. 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. Some platforms might define other predefined environments. To set the floating-point environment, you can use either of these functions: -- Function: int fesetenv (const fenv_t *ENVP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Set the floating-point environment to that described by ENVP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int feupdateenv (const fenv_t *ENVP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Like ‘fesetenv’, this function sets the floating-point environment to that described by ENVP. However, if any exceptions were flagged in the status word before ‘feupdateenv’ was called, they remain flagged after the call. In other words, after ‘feupdateenv’ is called, the status word is the bitwise OR of the previous status word and the one saved in ENVP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. TS 18661-1:2014 defines additional functions to save and restore floating-point control modes (such as the rounding mode and whether traps are enabled) while leaving other status (such as raised flags) unchanged. The special macro ‘FE_DFL_MODE’ may be passed to ‘fesetmode’. It represents the floating-point control modes at program start. -- Function: int fegetmode (femode_t *MODEP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Store the floating-point control modes in the variable pointed to by MODEP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. -- Function: int fesetmode (const femode_t *MODEP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Set the floating-point control modes to those described by MODEP. The function returns zero in case the operation was successful, a non-zero value otherwise. To control for individual exceptions if raising them causes a trap to occur, you can use the following two functions. *Portability Note:* These functions are all GNU extensions. -- Function: int feenableexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function enables traps for each of the exceptions as indicated by the parameter EXCEPTS. The individual exceptions are described in *note Status bit operations::. Only the specified exceptions are enabled, the status of the other exceptions is not changed. The function returns the previous enabled exceptions in case the operation was successful, ‘-1’ otherwise. -- Function: int fedisableexcept (int EXCEPTS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function disables traps for each of the exceptions as indicated by the parameter EXCEPTS. The individual exceptions are described in *note Status bit operations::. Only the specified exceptions are disabled, the status of the other exceptions is not changed. The function returns the previous enabled exceptions in case the operation was successful, ‘-1’ otherwise. -- Function: int fegetexcept (void) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The function returns a bitmask of all currently enabled exceptions. It returns ‘-1’ in case of failure.  File: libc.info, Node: Arithmetic Functions, Next: Complex Numbers, Prev: Control Functions, Up: Arithmetic 20.8 Arithmetic Functions ========================= The C library provides functions to do basic operations on floating-point numbers. These include absolute value, maximum and minimum, normalization, bit twiddling, rounding, and a few others. * Menu: * Absolute Value:: Absolute values of integers and floats. * Normalization Functions:: Extracting exponents and putting them back. * Rounding Functions:: Rounding floats to integers. * Remainder Functions:: Remainders on division, precisely defined. * FP Bit Twiddling:: Sign bit adjustment. Adding epsilon. * FP Comparison Functions:: Comparisons without risk of exceptions. * Misc FP Arithmetic:: Max, min, positive difference, multiply-add.  File: libc.info, Node: Absolute Value, Next: Normalization Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.1 Absolute Value --------------------- 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’; the ‘fabs’ functions are declared in ‘math.h’; the ‘cabs’ functions are declared in ‘complex.h’. -- Function: int abs (int NUMBER) -- Function: long int labs (long int NUMBER) -- Function: long long int llabs (long long int NUMBER) -- Function: intmax_t imaxabs (intmax_t NUMBER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note 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 *note Integers:: for a description of the ‘intmax_t’ type. -- Function: double fabs (double NUMBER) -- Function: float fabsf (float NUMBER) -- Function: long double fabsl (long double NUMBER) -- Function: _FloatN fabsfN (_FloatN NUMBER) -- Function: _FloatNx fabsfNx (_FloatNx NUMBER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns the absolute value of the floating-point number NUMBER. -- Function: double cabs (complex double Z) -- Function: float cabsf (complex float Z) -- Function: long double cabsl (complex long double Z) -- Function: _FloatN cabsfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: _FloatNx cabsfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the absolute value of the complex number Z (*note 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 *note Exponents and Logarithms::.  File: libc.info, Node: Normalization Functions, Next: Rounding Functions, Prev: Absolute Value, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.2 Normalization Functions ------------------------------ The functions described in this section are primarily provided as a way to efficiently perform certain low-level manipulations on floating point numbers that are represented internally using a binary radix; see *note Floating Point Concepts::. These functions are required to have equivalent behavior even if the representation does not use a radix of 2, but of course they are unlikely to be particularly efficient in those cases. All these functions are declared in ‘math.h’. -- Function: double frexp (double VALUE, int *EXPONENT) -- Function: float frexpf (float VALUE, int *EXPONENT) -- Function: long double frexpl (long double VALUE, int *EXPONENT) -- Function: _FloatN frexpfN (_FloatN VALUE, int *EXPONENT) -- Function: _FloatNx frexpfNx (_FloatNx VALUE, int *EXPONENT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are used to split the number VALUE into a normalized fraction and an exponent. If the argument VALUE is not zero, the return value is VALUE times a power of two, and its magnitude is always in the range 1/2 (inclusive) to 1 (exclusive). The corresponding exponent is stored in ‘*EXPONENT’; the return value multiplied by 2 raised to this exponent equals the original number VALUE. For example, ‘frexp (12.8, &exponent)’ returns ‘0.8’ and stores ‘4’ in ‘exponent’. If VALUE is zero, then the return value is zero and zero is stored in ‘*EXPONENT’. -- Function: double ldexp (double VALUE, int EXPONENT) -- Function: float ldexpf (float VALUE, int EXPONENT) -- Function: long double ldexpl (long double VALUE, int EXPONENT) -- Function: _FloatN ldexpfN (_FloatN VALUE, int EXPONENT) -- Function: _FloatNx ldexpfNx (_FloatNx VALUE, int EXPONENT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the result of multiplying the floating-point number VALUE by 2 raised to the power EXPONENT. (It can be used to reassemble floating-point numbers that were taken apart by ‘frexp’.) For example, ‘ldexp (0.8, 4)’ returns ‘12.8’. The following functions, which come from BSD, provide facilities equivalent to those of ‘ldexp’ and ‘frexp’. See also the ISO C function ‘logb’ which originally also appeared in BSD. The ‘_FloatN’ and ‘_FloatN’ variants of the following functions come from TS 18661-3:2015. -- Function: double scalb (double VALUE, double EXPONENT) -- Function: float scalbf (float VALUE, float EXPONENT) -- Function: long double scalbl (long double VALUE, long double EXPONENT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘scalb’ function is the BSD name for ‘ldexp’. -- Function: double scalbn (double X, int N) -- Function: float scalbnf (float X, int N) -- Function: long double scalbnl (long double X, int N) -- Function: _FloatN scalbnfN (_FloatN X, int N) -- Function: _FloatNx scalbnfNx (_FloatNx X, int N) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘scalbn’ is identical to ‘scalb’, except that the exponent N is an ‘int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: double scalbln (double X, long int N) -- Function: float scalblnf (float X, long int N) -- Function: long double scalblnl (long double X, long int N) -- Function: _FloatN scalblnfN (_FloatN X, long int N) -- Function: _FloatNx scalblnfNx (_FloatNx X, long int N) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘scalbln’ is identical to ‘scalb’, except that the exponent N is a ‘long int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: double significand (double X) -- Function: float significandf (float X) -- Function: long double significandl (long double X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘significand’ returns the mantissa of X scaled to the range [1, 2). It is equivalent to ‘scalb (X, (double) -ilogb (X))’. This function exists mainly for use in certain standardized tests of IEEE 754 conformance.  File: libc.info, Node: Rounding Functions, Next: Remainder Functions, Prev: Normalization Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.3 Rounding Functions ------------------------- The functions listed here perform operations such as rounding and truncation of floating-point values. Some of these functions convert floating point numbers to integer values. They are all declared in ‘math.h’. You can also convert floating-point numbers to integers simply by casting them to ‘int’. This discards the fractional part, effectively rounding towards zero. However, this only works if the result can actually be represented as an ‘int’—for very large numbers, this is impossible. The functions listed here return the result as a ‘double’ instead to get around this problem. The ‘fromfp’ functions use the following macros, from TS 18661-1:2014, to specify the direction of rounding. These correspond to the rounding directions defined in IEEE 754-2008. ‘FP_INT_UPWARD’ Round toward +oo. ‘FP_INT_DOWNWARD’ Round toward -oo. ‘FP_INT_TOWARDZERO’ Round toward zero. ‘FP_INT_TONEARESTFROMZERO’ Round to nearest, ties round away from zero. ‘FP_INT_TONEAREST’ Round to nearest, ties round to even. -- Function: double ceil (double X) -- Function: float ceilf (float X) -- Function: long double ceill (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN ceilfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx ceilfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions round X upwards to the nearest integer, returning that value as a ‘double’. Thus, ‘ceil (1.5)’ is ‘2.0’. -- Function: double floor (double X) -- Function: float floorf (float X) -- Function: long double floorl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN floorfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx floorfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions round X downwards to the nearest integer, returning that value as a ‘double’. Thus, ‘floor (1.5)’ is ‘1.0’ and ‘floor (-1.5)’ is ‘-2.0’. -- Function: double trunc (double X) -- Function: float truncf (float X) -- Function: long double truncl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN truncfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx truncfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘trunc’ functions round X towards zero to the nearest integer (returned in floating-point format). Thus, ‘trunc (1.5)’ is ‘1.0’ and ‘trunc (-1.5)’ is ‘-1.0’. -- Function: double rint (double X) -- Function: float rintf (float X) -- Function: long double rintl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN rintfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx rintfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions round X to an integer value according to the current rounding mode. *Note Floating Point Parameters::, for information about the various rounding modes. The default rounding mode is to round to the nearest integer; some machines support other modes, but round-to-nearest is always used unless you explicitly select another. If X was not initially an integer, these functions raise the inexact exception. -- Function: double nearbyint (double X) -- Function: float nearbyintf (float X) -- Function: long double nearbyintl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN nearbyintfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx nearbyintfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the same value as the ‘rint’ functions, but do not raise the inexact exception if X is not an integer. -- Function: double round (double X) -- Function: float roundf (float X) -- Function: long double roundl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN roundfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx roundfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are similar to ‘rint’, but they round halfway cases away from zero instead of to the nearest integer (or other current rounding mode). -- Function: double roundeven (double X) -- Function: float roundevenf (float X) -- Function: long double roundevenl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN roundevenfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx roundevenfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, are similar to ‘round’, but they round halfway cases to even instead of away from zero. -- Function: long int lrint (double X) -- Function: long int lrintf (float X) -- Function: long int lrintl (long double X) -- Function: long int lrintfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: long int lrintfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are just like ‘rint’, but they return a ‘long int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: long long int llrint (double X) -- Function: long long int llrintf (float X) -- Function: long long int llrintl (long double X) -- Function: long long int llrintfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: long long int llrintfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are just like ‘rint’, but they return a ‘long long int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: long int lround (double X) -- Function: long int lroundf (float X) -- Function: long int lroundl (long double X) -- Function: long int lroundfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: long int lroundfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are just like ‘round’, but they return a ‘long int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: long long int llround (double X) -- Function: long long int llroundf (float X) -- Function: long long int llroundl (long double X) -- Function: long long int llroundfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: long long int llroundfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are just like ‘round’, but they return a ‘long long int’ instead of a floating-point number. -- Function: intmax_t fromfp (double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpf (float X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpl (long double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpfN (_FloatN X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpfNx (_FloatNx X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfp (double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpf (float X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpl (long double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpfN (_FloatN X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpfNx (_FloatNx X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpx (double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpxf (float X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpxl (long double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpxfN (_FloatN X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: intmax_t fromfpxfNx (_FloatNx X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpx (double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpxf (float X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpxl (long double X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpxfN (_FloatN X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) -- Function: uintmax_t ufromfpxfNx (_FloatNx X, int ROUND, unsigned int WIDTH) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, convert a floating-point number to an integer according to the rounding direction ROUND (one of the ‘FP_INT_*’ macros). If the integer is outside the range of a signed or unsigned (depending on the return type of the function) type of width WIDTH bits (or outside the range of the return type, if WIDTH is larger), or if X is infinite or NaN, or if WIDTH is zero, a domain error occurs and an unspecified value is returned. The functions with an ‘x’ in their names raise the inexact exception when a domain error does not occur and the argument is not an integer; the other functions do not raise the inexact exception. -- Function: double modf (double VALUE, double *INTEGER-PART) -- Function: float modff (float VALUE, float *INTEGER-PART) -- Function: long double modfl (long double VALUE, long double *INTEGER-PART) -- Function: _FloatN modffN (_FloatN VALUE, _FloatN *INTEGER-PART) -- Function: _FloatNx modffNx (_FloatNx VALUE, _FloatNx *INTEGER-PART) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions break the argument VALUE into an integer part and a fractional part (between ‘-1’ and ‘1’, exclusive). Their sum equals VALUE. Each of the parts has the same sign as VALUE, and the integer part is always rounded toward zero. ‘modf’ stores the integer part in ‘*INTEGER-PART’, and returns the fractional part. For example, ‘modf (2.5, &intpart)’ returns ‘0.5’ and stores ‘2.0’ into ‘intpart’.  File: libc.info, Node: Remainder Functions, Next: FP Bit Twiddling, Prev: Rounding Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.4 Remainder Functions -------------------------- The functions in this section compute the remainder on division of two floating-point numbers. Each is a little different; pick the one that suits your problem. -- Function: double fmod (double NUMERATOR, double DENOMINATOR) -- Function: float fmodf (float NUMERATOR, float DENOMINATOR) -- Function: long double fmodl (long double NUMERATOR, long double DENOMINATOR) -- Function: _FloatN fmodfN (_FloatN NUMERATOR, _FloatN DENOMINATOR) -- Function: _FloatNx fmodfNx (_FloatNx NUMERATOR, _FloatNx DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions compute the remainder from the division of NUMERATOR by DENOMINATOR. Specifically, the return value is ‘NUMERATOR - N * DENOMINATOR’, where N is the quotient of NUMERATOR divided by DENOMINATOR, rounded towards zero to an integer. Thus, ‘fmod (6.5, 2.3)’ returns ‘1.9’, which is ‘6.5’ minus ‘4.6’. The result has the same sign as the NUMERATOR and has magnitude less than the magnitude of the DENOMINATOR. If DENOMINATOR is zero, ‘fmod’ signals a domain error. -- Function: double remainder (double NUMERATOR, double DENOMINATOR) -- Function: float remainderf (float NUMERATOR, float DENOMINATOR) -- Function: long double remainderl (long double NUMERATOR, long double DENOMINATOR) -- Function: _FloatN remainderfN (_FloatN NUMERATOR, _FloatN DENOMINATOR) -- Function: _FloatNx remainderfNx (_FloatNx NUMERATOR, _FloatNx DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are like ‘fmod’ except that they round the internal quotient N to the nearest integer instead of towards zero to an integer. For example, ‘remainder (6.5, 2.3)’ returns ‘-0.4’, which is ‘6.5’ minus ‘6.9’. The absolute value of the result is less than or equal to half the absolute value of the DENOMINATOR. The difference between ‘fmod (NUMERATOR, DENOMINATOR)’ and ‘remainder (NUMERATOR, DENOMINATOR)’ is always either DENOMINATOR, minus DENOMINATOR, or zero. If DENOMINATOR is zero, ‘remainder’ signals a domain error. -- Function: double drem (double NUMERATOR, double DENOMINATOR) -- Function: float dremf (float NUMERATOR, float DENOMINATOR) -- Function: long double dreml (long double NUMERATOR, long double DENOMINATOR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is another name for ‘remainder’.  File: libc.info, Node: FP Bit Twiddling, Next: FP Comparison Functions, Prev: Remainder Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.5 Setting and modifying single bits of FP values ----------------------------------------------------- There are some operations that are too complicated or expensive to perform by hand on floating-point numbers. ISO C99 defines functions to do these operations, which mostly involve changing single bits. -- Function: double copysign (double X, double Y) -- Function: float copysignf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double copysignl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN copysignfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx copysignfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return X but with the sign of Y. They work even if X or Y are NaN or zero. Both of these can carry a sign (although not all implementations support it) and this is one of the few operations that can tell the difference. ‘copysign’ never raises an exception. This function is defined in IEC 559 (and the appendix with recommended functions in IEEE 754/IEEE 854). -- Function: int signbit (_float-type_ X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘signbit’ is a generic macro which can work on all floating-point types. It returns a nonzero value if the value of X has its sign bit set. This is not the same as ‘x < 0.0’, because IEEE 754 floating point allows zero to be signed. The comparison ‘-0.0 < 0.0’ is false, but ‘signbit (-0.0)’ will return a nonzero value. -- Function: double nextafter (double X, double Y) -- Function: float nextafterf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double nextafterl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN nextafterfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx nextafterfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘nextafter’ function returns the next representable neighbor of X in the direction towards Y. The size of the step between X and the result depends on the type of the result. If X = Y the function simply returns Y. If either value is ‘NaN’, ‘NaN’ is returned. Otherwise a value corresponding to the value of the least significant bit in the mantissa is added or subtracted, depending on the direction. ‘nextafter’ will signal overflow or underflow if the result goes outside of the range of normalized numbers. This function is defined in IEC 559 (and the appendix with recommended functions in IEEE 754/IEEE 854). -- Function: double nexttoward (double X, long double Y) -- Function: float nexttowardf (float X, long double Y) -- Function: long double nexttowardl (long double X, long double Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are identical to the corresponding versions of ‘nextafter’ except that their second argument is a ‘long double’. -- Function: double nextup (double X) -- Function: float nextupf (float X) -- Function: long double nextupl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN nextupfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx nextupfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘nextup’ function returns the next representable neighbor of X in the direction of positive infinity. If X is the smallest negative subnormal number in the type of X the function returns ‘-0’. If X = ‘0’ the function returns the smallest positive subnormal number in the type of X. If X is NaN, NaN is returned. If X is +oo, +oo is returned. ‘nextup’ is from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015. ‘nextup’ never raises an exception except for signaling NaNs. -- Function: double nextdown (double X) -- Function: float nextdownf (float X) -- Function: long double nextdownl (long double X) -- Function: _FloatN nextdownfN (_FloatN X) -- Function: _FloatNx nextdownfNx (_FloatNx X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘nextdown’ function returns the next representable neighbor of X in the direction of negative infinity. If X is the smallest positive subnormal number in the type of X the function returns ‘+0’. If X = ‘0’ the function returns the smallest negative subnormal number in the type of X. If X is NaN, NaN is returned. If X is -oo, -oo is returned. ‘nextdown’ is from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015. ‘nextdown’ never raises an exception except for signaling NaNs. -- Function: double nan (const char *TAGP) -- Function: float nanf (const char *TAGP) -- Function: long double nanl (const char *TAGP) -- Function: _FloatN nanfN (const char *TAGP) -- Function: _FloatNx nanfNx (const char *TAGP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘nan’ function returns a representation of NaN, provided that NaN is supported by the target platform. ‘nan ("N-CHAR-SEQUENCE")’ is equivalent to ‘strtod ("NAN(N-CHAR-SEQUENCE)")’. The argument TAGP is used in an unspecified manner. On IEEE 754 systems, there are many representations of NaN, and TAGP selects one. On other systems it may do nothing. -- Function: int canonicalize (double *CX, const double *X) -- Function: int canonicalizef (float *CX, const float *X) -- Function: int canonicalizel (long double *CX, const long double *X) -- Function: int canonicalizefN (_FloatN *CX, const _FloatN *X) -- Function: int canonicalizefNx (_FloatNx *CX, const _FloatNx *X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. In some floating-point formats, some values have canonical (preferred) and noncanonical encodings (for IEEE interchange binary formats, all encodings are canonical). These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, attempt to produce a canonical version of the floating-point value pointed to by X; if that value is a signaling NaN, they raise the invalid exception and produce a quiet NaN. If a canonical value is produced, it is stored in the object pointed to by CX, and these functions return zero. Otherwise (if a canonical value could not be produced because the object pointed to by X is not a valid representation of any floating-point value), the object pointed to by CX is unchanged and a nonzero value is returned. Note that some formats have multiple encodings of a value which are all equally canonical; when such an encoding is used as an input to this function, any such encoding of the same value (or of the corresponding quiet NaN, if that value is a signaling NaN) may be produced as output. -- Function: double getpayload (const double *X) -- Function: float getpayloadf (const float *X) -- Function: long double getpayloadl (const long double *X) -- Function: _FloatN getpayloadfN (const _FloatN *X) -- Function: _FloatNx getpayloadfNx (const _FloatNx *X) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. IEEE 754 defines the “payload” of a NaN to be an integer value encoded in the representation of the NaN. Payloads are typically propagated from NaN inputs to the result of a floating-point operation. These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return the payload of the NaN pointed to by X (returned as a positive integer, or positive zero, represented as a floating-point number); if X is not a NaN, they return −1. They raise no floating-point exceptions even for signaling NaNs. (The return value of −1 for an argument that is not a NaN is specified in C2x; the value was unspecified in TS 18661.) -- Function: int setpayload (double *X, double PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadf (float *X, float PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadl (long double *X, long double PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadfN (_FloatN *X, _FloatN PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadfNx (_FloatNx *X, _FloatNx PAYLOAD) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, set the object pointed to by X to a quiet NaN with payload PAYLOAD and a zero sign bit and return zero. If PAYLOAD is not a positive-signed integer that is a valid payload for a quiet NaN of the given type, the object pointed to by X is set to positive zero and a nonzero value is returned. They raise no floating-point exceptions. -- Function: int setpayloadsig (double *X, double PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadsigf (float *X, float PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadsigl (long double *X, long double PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadsigfN (_FloatN *X, _FloatN PAYLOAD) -- Function: int setpayloadsigfNx (_FloatNx *X, _FloatNx PAYLOAD) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, defined by TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, set the object pointed to by X to a signaling NaN with payload PAYLOAD and a zero sign bit and return zero. If PAYLOAD is not a positive-signed integer that is a valid payload for a signaling NaN of the given type, the object pointed to by X is set to positive zero and a nonzero value is returned. They raise no floating-point exceptions.  File: libc.info, Node: FP Comparison Functions, Next: Misc FP Arithmetic, Prev: FP Bit Twiddling, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.6 Floating-Point Comparison Functions ------------------------------------------ The standard C comparison operators provoke exceptions when one or other of the operands is NaN. For example, int v = a < 1.0; will raise an exception if A is NaN. (This does _not_ happen with ‘==’ and ‘!=’; those merely return false and true, respectively, when NaN is examined.) Frequently this exception is undesirable. ISO C99 therefore defines comparison functions that do not raise exceptions when NaN is examined. All of the functions are implemented as macros which allow their arguments to be of any floating-point type. The macros are guaranteed to evaluate their arguments only once. TS 18661-1:2014 adds such a macro for an equality comparison that _does_ raise an exception for a NaN argument; it also adds functions that provide a total ordering on all floating-point values, including NaNs, without raising any exceptions even for signaling NaNs. -- Macro: int isgreater (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether the argument X is greater than Y. It is equivalent to ‘(X) > (Y)’, but no exception is raised if X or Y are NaN. -- Macro: int isgreaterequal (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether the argument X is greater than or equal to Y. It is equivalent to ‘(X) >= (Y)’, but no exception is raised if X or Y are NaN. -- Macro: int isless (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether the argument X is less than Y. It is equivalent to ‘(X) < (Y)’, but no exception is raised if X or Y are NaN. -- Macro: int islessequal (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether the argument X is less than or equal to Y. It is equivalent to ‘(X) <= (Y)’, but no exception is raised if X or Y are NaN. -- Macro: int islessgreater (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether the argument X is less or greater than Y. It is equivalent to ‘(X) < (Y) || (X) > (Y)’ (although it only evaluates X and Y once), but no exception is raised if X or Y are NaN. This macro is not equivalent to ‘X != Y’, because that expression is true if X or Y are NaN. -- Macro: int isunordered (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether its arguments are unordered. In other words, it is true if X or Y are NaN, and false otherwise. -- Macro: int iseqsig (_real-floating_ X, _real-floating_ Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This macro determines whether its arguments are equal. It is equivalent to ‘(X) == (Y)’, but it raises the invalid exception and sets ‘errno’ to ‘EDOM’ if either argument is a NaN. -- Function: int totalorder (const double *X, const double *Y) -- Function: int totalorderf (const float *X, const float *Y) -- Function: int totalorderl (const long double *X, const long double *Y) -- Function: int totalorderfN (const _FloatN *X, const _FloatN *Y) -- Function: int totalorderfNx (const _FloatNx *X, const _FloatNx *Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions determine whether the total order relationship, defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for ‘*X’ and ‘*Y’, returning nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false. No exceptions are raised even for signaling NaNs. The relationship is true if they are the same floating-point value (including sign for zero and NaNs, and payload for NaNs), or if ‘*X’ comes before ‘*Y’ in the following order: negative quiet NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative signaling NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative infinity; finite numbers, in ascending order, with negative zero before positive zero; positive infinity; positive signaling NaNs, in order of increasing payload; positive quiet NaNs, in order of increasing payload. -- Function: int totalordermag (const double *X, const double *Y) -- Function: int totalordermagf (const float *X, const float *Y) -- Function: int totalordermagl (const long double *X, const long double *Y) -- Function: int totalordermagfN (const _FloatN *X, const _FloatN *Y) -- Function: int totalordermagfNx (const _FloatNx *X, const _FloatNx *Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions determine whether the total order relationship, defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for the absolute values of ‘*X’ and ‘*Y’, returning nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false. No exceptions are raised even for signaling NaNs. Not all machines provide hardware support for these operations. On machines that don’t, the macros can be very slow. Therefore, you should not use these functions when NaN is not a concern. *NB:* There are no macros ‘isequal’ or ‘isunequal’. They are unnecessary, because the ‘==’ and ‘!=’ operators do _not_ throw an exception if one or both of the operands are NaN.  File: libc.info, Node: Misc FP Arithmetic, Prev: FP Comparison Functions, Up: Arithmetic Functions 20.8.7 Miscellaneous FP arithmetic functions -------------------------------------------- The functions in this section perform miscellaneous but common operations that are awkward to express with C operators. On some processors these functions can use special machine instructions to perform these operations faster than the equivalent C code. -- Function: double fmin (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fminf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double fminl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN fminfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx fminfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘fmin’ function returns the lesser of the two values X and Y. It is similar to the expression ((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y)) except that X and Y are only evaluated once. If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments are NaN, NaN is returned. -- Function: double fmax (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fmaxf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double fmaxl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN fmaxfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx fmaxfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘fmax’ function returns the greater of the two values X and Y. If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments are NaN, NaN is returned. -- Function: double fminmag (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fminmagf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double fminmagl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN fminmagfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx fminmagfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return whichever of the two values X and Y has the smaller absolute value. If both have the same absolute value, or either is NaN, they behave the same as the ‘fmin’ functions. -- Function: double fmaxmag (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fmaxmagf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double fmaxmagl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN fmaxmagfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx fmaxmagfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014, return whichever of the two values X and Y has the greater absolute value. If both have the same absolute value, or either is NaN, they behave the same as the ‘fmax’ functions. -- Function: double fdim (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fdimf (float X, float Y) -- Function: long double fdiml (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatN fdimfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatNx fdimfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘fdim’ function returns the positive difference between X and Y. The positive difference is X - Y if X is greater than Y, and 0 otherwise. If X, Y, or both are NaN, NaN is returned. -- Function: double fma (double X, double Y, double Z) -- Function: float fmaf (float X, float Y, float Z) -- Function: long double fmal (long double X, long double Y, long double Z) -- Function: _FloatN fmafN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y, _FloatN Z) -- Function: _FloatNx fmafNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y, _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘fma’ function performs floating-point multiply-add. This is the operation (X * Y) + Z, but the intermediate result is not rounded to the destination type. This can sometimes improve the precision of a calculation. This function was introduced because some processors have a special instruction to perform multiply-add. The C compiler cannot use it directly, because the expression ‘x*y + z’ is defined to round the intermediate result. ‘fma’ lets you choose when you want to round only once. On processors which do not implement multiply-add in hardware, ‘fma’ can be very slow since it must avoid intermediate rounding. ‘math.h’ defines the symbols ‘FP_FAST_FMA’, ‘FP_FAST_FMAF’, and ‘FP_FAST_FMAL’ when the corresponding version of ‘fma’ is no slower than the expression ‘x*y + z’. In the GNU C Library, this always means the operation is implemented in hardware. -- Function: float fadd (double X, double Y) -- Function: float faddl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: double daddl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMaddfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMaddfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxaddfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxaddfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return X + Y, rounded once to the return type of the function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the arguments. -- Function: float fsub (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fsubl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: double dsubl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMsubfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMsubfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxsubfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxsubfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return X - Y, rounded once to the return type of the function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the arguments. -- Function: float fmul (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fmull (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: double dmull (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMmulfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMmulfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxmulfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxmulfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return X * Y, rounded once to the return type of the function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the arguments. -- Function: float fdiv (double X, double Y) -- Function: float fdivl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: double ddivl (long double X, long double Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMdivfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatM fMdivfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxdivfN (_FloatN X, _FloatN Y) -- Function: _FloatMx fMxdivfNx (_FloatNx X, _FloatNx Y) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions, from TS 18661-1:2014 and TS 18661-3:2015, return X / Y, rounded once to the return type of the function without any intermediate rounding to the type of the arguments.  File: libc.info, Node: Complex Numbers, Next: Operations on Complex, Prev: Arithmetic Functions, Up: Arithmetic 20.9 Complex Numbers ==================== ISO C99 introduces support for complex numbers in C. This is done with a new type qualifier, ‘complex’. It is a keyword if and only if ‘complex.h’ has been included. There are three complex types, corresponding to the three real types: ‘float complex’, ‘double complex’, and ‘long double complex’. Likewise, on machines that have support for ‘_FloatN’ or ‘_FloatNx’ enabled, the complex types ‘_FloatN complex’ and ‘_FloatNx complex’ are also available if ‘complex.h’ has been included; *note Mathematics::. To construct complex numbers you need a way to indicate the imaginary part of a number. There is no standard notation for an imaginary floating point constant. Instead, ‘complex.h’ defines two macros that can be used to create complex numbers. -- Macro: const float complex _Complex_I This macro is a representation of the complex number “0+1i”. Multiplying a real floating-point value by ‘_Complex_I’ gives a complex number whose value is purely imaginary. You can use this to construct complex constants: 3.0 + 4.0i = 3.0 + 4.0 * _Complex_I Note that ‘_Complex_I * _Complex_I’ has the value ‘-1’, but the type of that value is ‘complex’. ‘_Complex_I’ is a bit of a mouthful. ‘complex.h’ also defines a shorter name for the same constant. -- Macro: const float complex I This macro has exactly the same value as ‘_Complex_I’. Most of the time it is preferable. However, it causes problems if you want to use the identifier ‘I’ for something else. You can safely write #include #undef I if you need ‘I’ for your own purposes. (In that case we recommend you also define some other short name for ‘_Complex_I’, such as ‘J’.)  File: libc.info, Node: Operations on Complex, Next: Parsing of Numbers, Prev: Complex Numbers, Up: Arithmetic 20.10 Projections, Conjugates, and Decomposing of Complex Numbers ================================================================= ISO C99 also defines functions that perform basic operations on complex numbers, such as decomposition and conjugation. The prototypes for all these functions are in ‘complex.h’. All functions are available in three variants, one for each of the three complex types. -- Function: double creal (complex double Z) -- Function: float crealf (complex float Z) -- Function: long double creall (complex long double Z) -- Function: _FloatN crealfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: _FloatNx crealfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the real part of the complex number Z. -- Function: double cimag (complex double Z) -- Function: float cimagf (complex float Z) -- Function: long double cimagl (complex long double Z) -- Function: _FloatN cimagfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: _FloatNx cimagfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the imaginary part of the complex number Z. -- Function: complex double conj (complex double Z) -- Function: complex float conjf (complex float Z) -- Function: complex long double conjl (complex long double Z) -- Function: complex _FloatN conjfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: complex _FloatNx conjfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the conjugate value of the complex number Z. The conjugate of a complex number has the same real part and a negated imaginary part. In other words, ‘conj(a + bi) = a + -bi’. -- Function: double carg (complex double Z) -- Function: float cargf (complex float Z) -- Function: long double cargl (complex long double Z) -- Function: _FloatN cargfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: _FloatNx cargfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the argument of the complex number Z. The argument of a complex number is the angle in the complex plane between the positive real axis and a line passing through zero and the number. This angle is measured in the usual fashion and ranges from -pi to pi. ‘carg’ has a branch cut along the negative real axis. -- Function: complex double cproj (complex double Z) -- Function: complex float cprojf (complex float Z) -- Function: complex long double cprojl (complex long double Z) -- Function: complex _FloatN cprojfN (complex _FloatN Z) -- Function: complex _FloatNx cprojfNx (complex _FloatNx Z) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions return the projection of the complex value Z onto the Riemann sphere. Values with an infinite imaginary part are projected to positive infinity on the real axis, even if the real part is NaN. If the real part is infinite, the result is equivalent to INFINITY + I * copysign (0.0, cimag (z))  File: libc.info, Node: Parsing of Numbers, Next: Printing of Floats, Prev: Operations on Complex, Up: Arithmetic 20.11 Parsing of Numbers ======================== This section describes functions for “reading” integer and floating-point numbers from a string. It may be more convenient in some cases to use ‘sscanf’ or one of the related functions; see *note Formatted Input::. But often you can make a program more robust by finding the tokens in the string by hand, then converting the numbers one by one. * Menu: * Parsing of Integers:: Functions for conversion of integer values. * Parsing of Floats:: Functions for conversion of floating-point values.  File: libc.info, Node: Parsing of Integers, Next: Parsing of Floats, Up: Parsing of Numbers 20.11.1 Parsing of Integers --------------------------- The ‘str’ functions are declared in ‘stdlib.h’ and those beginning with ‘wcs’ are declared in ‘wchar.h’. One might wonder about the use of ‘restrict’ in the prototypes of the functions in this section. It is seemingly useless but the ISO C standard uses it (for the functions defined there) so we have to do it as well. -- Function: long int strtol (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtol’ (“string-to-long”) function converts the initial part of STRING to a signed integer, which is returned as a value of type ‘long int’. This function attempts to decompose STRING as follows: • A (possibly empty) sequence of whitespace characters. Which characters are whitespace is determined by the ‘isspace’ function (*note Classification of Characters::). These are discarded. • An optional plus or minus sign (‘+’ or ‘-’). • A nonempty sequence of digits in the radix specified by BASE. If BASE is zero, decimal radix is assumed unless the series of digits begins with ‘0’ (specifying octal radix), or ‘0x’ or ‘0X’ (specifying hexadecimal radix); in other words, the same syntax used for integer constants in C. Otherwise BASE must have a value between ‘2’ and ‘36’. If BASE is ‘16’, the digits may optionally be preceded by ‘0x’ or ‘0X’. If base has no legal value the value returned is ‘0l’ and the global variable ‘errno’ is set to ‘EINVAL’. • Any remaining characters in the string. If TAILPTR is not a null pointer, ‘strtol’ stores a pointer to this tail in ‘*TAILPTR’. If the string is empty, contains only whitespace, or does not contain an initial substring that has the expected syntax for an integer in the specified BASE, no conversion is performed. In this case, ‘strtol’ returns a value of zero and the value stored in ‘*TAILPTR’ is the value of STRING. In a locale other than the standard ‘"C"’ locale, this function may recognize additional implementation-dependent syntax. If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not representable because of overflow, ‘strtol’ returns either ‘LONG_MAX’ or ‘LONG_MIN’ (*note Range of Type::), as appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets ‘errno’ to ‘ERANGE’ to indicate there was overflow. You should not check for errors by examining the return value of ‘strtol’, because the string might be a valid representation of ‘0l’, ‘LONG_MAX’, or ‘LONG_MIN’. Instead, check whether TAILPTR points to what you expect after the number (e.g. ‘'\0'’ if the string should end after the number). You also need to clear ‘errno’ before the call and check it afterward, in case there was overflow. There is an example at the end of this section. -- Function: long int wcstol (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstol’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtol’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstol’ function was introduced in Amendment 1 of ISO C90. -- Function: unsigned long int strtoul (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtoul’ (“string-to-unsigned-long”) function is like ‘strtol’ except it converts to an ‘unsigned long int’ value. The syntax is the same as described above for ‘strtol’. The value returned on overflow is ‘ULONG_MAX’ (*note Range of Type::). If STRING depicts a negative number, ‘strtoul’ acts the same as STRTOL but casts the result to an unsigned integer. That means for example that ‘strtoul’ on ‘"-1"’ returns ‘ULONG_MAX’ and an input more negative than ‘LONG_MIN’ returns (‘ULONG_MAX’ + 1) / 2. ‘strtoul’ sets ‘errno’ to ‘EINVAL’ if BASE is out of range, or ‘ERANGE’ on overflow. -- Function: unsigned long int wcstoul (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoul’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoul’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoul’ function was introduced in Amendment 1 of ISO C90. -- Function: long long int strtoll (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtoll’ function is like ‘strtol’ except that it returns a ‘long long int’ value, and accepts numbers with a correspondingly larger range. If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not representable because of overflow, ‘strtoll’ returns either ‘LLONG_MAX’ or ‘LLONG_MIN’ (*note Range of Type::), as appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets ‘errno’ to ‘ERANGE’ to indicate there was overflow. The ‘strtoll’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: long long int wcstoll (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoll’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoll’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoll’ function was introduced in Amendment 1 of ISO C90. -- Function: long long int strtoq (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘strtoq’ (“string-to-quad-word”) is the BSD name for ‘strtoll’. -- Function: long long int wcstoq (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoq’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoq’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoq’ function is a GNU extension. -- Function: unsigned long long int strtoull (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtoull’ function is related to ‘strtoll’ the same way ‘strtoul’ is related to ‘strtol’. The ‘strtoull’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: unsigned long long int wcstoull (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoull’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoull’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoull’ function was introduced in Amendment 1 of ISO C90. -- Function: unsigned long long int strtouq (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘strtouq’ is the BSD name for ‘strtoull’. -- Function: unsigned long long int wcstouq (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstouq’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtouq’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstouq’ function is a GNU extension. -- Function: intmax_t strtoimax (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtoimax’ function is like ‘strtol’ except that it returns a ‘intmax_t’ value, and accepts numbers of a corresponding range. If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not representable because of overflow, ‘strtoimax’ returns either ‘INTMAX_MAX’ or ‘INTMAX_MIN’ (*note Integers::), as appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets ‘errno’ to ‘ERANGE’ to indicate there was overflow. See *note Integers:: for a description of the ‘intmax_t’ type. The ‘strtoimax’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: intmax_t wcstoimax (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoimax’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoimax’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoimax’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: uintmax_t strtoumax (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtoumax’ function is related to ‘strtoimax’ the same way that ‘strtoul’ is related to ‘strtol’. See *note Integers:: for a description of the ‘intmax_t’ type. The ‘strtoumax’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: uintmax_t wcstoumax (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR, int BASE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstoumax’ function is equivalent to the ‘strtoumax’ function in nearly all aspects but handles wide character strings. The ‘wcstoumax’ function was introduced in ISO C99. -- Function: long int atol (const char *STRING) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to the ‘strtol’ function with a BASE argument of ‘10’, except that it need not detect overflow errors. The ‘atol’ function is provided mostly for compatibility with existing code; using ‘strtol’ is more robust. -- Function: int atoi (const char *STRING) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is like ‘atol’, except that it returns an ‘int’. The ‘atoi’ function is also considered obsolete; use ‘strtol’ instead. -- Function: long long int atoll (const char *STRING) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to ‘atol’, except it returns a ‘long long int’. The ‘atoll’ function was introduced in ISO C99. It too is obsolete (despite having just been added); use ‘strtoll’ instead. All the functions mentioned in this section so far do not handle alternative representations of characters as described in the locale data. Some locales specify thousands separator and the way they have to be used which can help to make large numbers more readable. To read such numbers one has to use the ‘scanf’ functions with the ‘'’ flag. Here is a function which parses a string as a sequence of integers and returns the sum of them: int sum_ints_from_string (char *string) { int sum = 0; while (1) { char *tail; int next; /* Skip whitespace by hand, to detect the end. */ while (isspace (*string)) string++; if (*string == 0) break; /* There is more nonwhitespace, */ /* so it ought to be another number. */ errno = 0; /* Parse it. */ next = strtol (string, &tail, 0); /* Add it in, if not overflow. */ if (errno) printf ("Overflow\n"); else sum += next; /* Advance past it. */ string = tail; } return sum; }  File: libc.info, Node: Parsing of Floats, Prev: Parsing of Integers, Up: Parsing of Numbers 20.11.2 Parsing of Floats ------------------------- The ‘str’ functions are declared in ‘stdlib.h’ and those beginning with ‘wcs’ are declared in ‘wchar.h’. One might wonder about the use of ‘restrict’ in the prototypes of the functions in this section. It is seemingly useless but the ISO C standard uses it (for the functions defined there) so we have to do it as well. -- Function: double strtod (const char *restrict STRING, char **restrict TAILPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘strtod’ (“string-to-double”) function converts the initial part of STRING to a floating-point number, which is returned as a value of type ‘double’. This function attempts to decompose STRING as follows: • A (possibly empty) sequence of whitespace characters. Which characters are whitespace is determined by the ‘isspace’ function (*note Classification of Characters::). These are discarded. • An optional plus or minus sign (‘+’ or ‘-’). • A floating point number in decimal or hexadecimal format. The decimal format is: − A nonempty sequence of digits optionally containing a decimal-point character—normally ‘.’, but it depends on the locale (*note General Numeric::). − An optional exponent part, consisting of a character ‘e’ or ‘E’, an optional sign, and a sequence of digits. The hexadecimal format is as follows: − A 0x or 0X followed by a nonempty sequence of hexadecimal digits optionally containing a decimal-point character—normally ‘.’, but it depends on the locale (*note General Numeric::). − An optional binary-exponent part, consisting of a character ‘p’ or ‘P’, an optional sign, and a sequence of digits. • Any remaining characters in the string. If TAILPTR is not a null pointer, a pointer to this tail of the string is stored in ‘*TAILPTR’. If the string is empty, contains only whitespace, or does not contain an initial substring that has the expected syntax for a floating-point number, no conversion is performed. In this case, ‘strtod’ returns a value of zero and the value returned in ‘*TAILPTR’ is the value of STRING. In a locale other than the standard ‘"C"’ or ‘"POSIX"’ locales, this function may recognize additional locale-dependent syntax. If the string has valid syntax for a floating-point number but the value is outside the range of a ‘double’, ‘strtod’ will signal overflow or underflow as described in *note Math Error Reporting::. ‘strtod’ recognizes four special input strings. The strings ‘"inf"’ and ‘"infinity"’ are converted to oo, or to the largest representable value if the floating-point format doesn’t support infinities. You can prepend a ‘"+"’ or ‘"-"’ to specify the sign. Case is ignored when scanning these strings. The strings ‘"nan"’ and ‘"nan(CHARS...)"’ are converted to NaN. Again, case is ignored. If CHARS... are provided, they are used in some unspecified fashion to select a particular representation of NaN (there can be several). Since zero is a valid result as well as the value returned on error, you should check for errors in the same way as for ‘strtol’, by examining ‘errno’ and TAILPTR. -- Function: float strtof (const char *STRING, char **TAILPTR) -- Function: long double strtold (const char *STRING, char **TAILPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are analogous to ‘strtod’, but return ‘float’ and ‘long double’ values respectively. They report errors in the same way as ‘strtod’. ‘strtof’ can be substantially faster than ‘strtod’, but has less precision; conversely, ‘strtold’ can be much slower but has more precision (on systems where ‘long double’ is a separate type). These functions have been GNU extensions and are new to ISO C99. -- Function: _FloatN strtofN (const char *STRING, char **TAILPTR) -- Function: _FloatNx strtofNx (const char *STRING, char **TAILPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are like ‘strtod’, except for the return type. They were introduced in ISO/IEC TS 18661-3 and are available on machines that support the related types; *note Mathematics::. -- Function: double wcstod (const wchar_t *restrict STRING, wchar_t **restrict TAILPTR) -- Function: float wcstof (const wchar_t *STRING, wchar_t **TAILPTR) -- Function: long double wcstold (const wchar_t *STRING, wchar_t **TAILPTR) -- Function: _FloatN wcstofN (const wchar_t *STRING, wchar_t **TAILPTR) -- Function: _FloatNx wcstofNx (const wchar_t *STRING, wchar_t **TAILPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘wcstod’, ‘wcstof’, ‘wcstol’, ‘wcstofN’, and ‘wcstofNx’ functions are equivalent in nearly all aspects to the ‘strtod’, ‘strtof’, ‘strtold’, ‘strtofN’, and ‘strtofNx’ functions, but they handle wide character strings. The ‘wcstod’ function was introduced in Amendment 1 of ISO C90. The ‘wcstof’ and ‘wcstold’ functions were introduced in ISO C99. The ‘wcstofN’ and ‘wcstofNx’ functions are not in any standard, but are added to provide completeness for the non-deprecated interface of wide character string to floating-point conversion functions. They are only available on machines that support the related types; *note Mathematics::. -- Function: double atof (const char *STRING) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is similar to the ‘strtod’ function, except that it need not detect overflow and underflow errors. The ‘atof’ function is provided mostly for compatibility with existing code; using ‘strtod’ is more robust. The GNU C Library also provides ‘_l’ versions of these functions, which take an additional argument, the locale to use in conversion. See also *note Parsing of Integers::.  File: libc.info, Node: Printing of Floats, Next: System V Number Conversion, Prev: Parsing of Numbers, Up: Arithmetic 20.12 Printing of Floats ======================== The ‘strfrom’ functions are declared in ‘stdlib.h’. -- Function: int strfromd (char *restrict STRING, size_t SIZE, const char *restrict FORMAT, double VALUE) -- Function: int strfromf (char *restrict STRING, size_t SIZE, const char *restrict FORMAT, float VALUE) -- Function: int strfroml (char *restrict STRING, size_t SIZE, const char *restrict FORMAT, long double VALUE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Unsafe heap | AC-Unsafe mem | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The functions ‘strfromd’ (“string-from-double”), ‘strfromf’ (“string-from-float”), and ‘strfroml’ (“string-from-long-double”) convert the floating-point number VALUE to a string of characters and stores them into the area pointed to by STRING. The conversion writes at most SIZE characters and respects the format specified by FORMAT. The format string must start with the character ‘%’. An optional precision follows, which starts with a period, ‘.’, and may be followed by a decimal integer, representing the precision. If a decimal integer is not specified after the period, the precision is taken to be zero. The character ‘*’ is not allowed. Finally, the format string ends with one of the following conversion specifiers: ‘a’, ‘A’, ‘e’, ‘E’, ‘f’, ‘F’, ‘g’ or ‘G’ (*note Table of Output Conversions::). Invalid format strings result in undefined behavior. These functions return the number of characters that would have been written to STRING had SIZE been sufficiently large, not counting the terminating null character. Thus, the null-terminated output has been completely written if and only if the returned value is less than SIZE. These functions were introduced by ISO/IEC TS 18661-1. -- Function: int strfromfN (char *restrict STRING, size_t SIZE, const char *restrict FORMAT, _FloatN VALUE) -- Function: int strfromfNx (char *restrict STRING, size_t SIZE, const char *restrict FORMAT, _FloatNx VALUE) Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Unsafe heap | AC-Unsafe mem | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. These functions are like ‘strfromd’, except for the type of ‘value’. They were introduced in ISO/IEC TS 18661-3 and are available on machines that support the related types; *note Mathematics::.  File: libc.info, Node: System V Number Conversion, Prev: Printing of Floats, Up: Arithmetic 20.13 Old-fashioned System V number-to-string functions ======================================================= The old System V C library provided three functions to convert numbers to strings, with unusual and hard-to-use semantics. The GNU C Library also provides these functions and some natural extensions. These functions are only available in the GNU C Library and on systems descended from AT&T Unix. Therefore, unless these functions do precisely what you need, it is better to use ‘sprintf’, which is standard. All these functions are defined in ‘stdlib.h’. -- Function: char * ecvt (double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:ecvt | AS-Unsafe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The function ‘ecvt’ converts the floating-point number VALUE to a string with at most NDIGIT decimal digits. The returned string contains no decimal point or sign. The first digit of the string is non-zero (unless VALUE is actually zero) and the last digit is rounded to nearest. ‘*DECPT’ is set to the index in the string of the first digit after the decimal point. ‘*NEG’ is set to a nonzero value if VALUE is negative, zero otherwise. If NDIGIT decimal digits would exceed the precision of a ‘double’ it is reduced to a system-specific value. The returned string is statically allocated and overwritten by each call to ‘ecvt’. If VALUE is zero, it is implementation defined whether ‘*DECPT’ is ‘0’ or ‘1’. For example: ‘ecvt (12.3, 5, &d, &n)’ returns ‘"12300"’ and sets D to ‘2’ and N to ‘0’. -- Function: char * fcvt (double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:fcvt | AS-Unsafe heap | AC-Unsafe mem | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The function ‘fcvt’ is like ‘ecvt’, but NDIGIT specifies the number of digits after the decimal point. If NDIGIT is less than zero, VALUE is rounded to the NDIGIT+1’th place to the left of the decimal point. For example, if NDIGIT is ‘-1’, VALUE will be rounded to the nearest 10. If NDIGIT is negative and larger than the number of digits to the left of the decimal point in VALUE, VALUE will be rounded to one significant digit. If NDIGIT decimal digits would exceed the precision of a ‘double’ it is reduced to a system-specific value. The returned string is statically allocated and overwritten by each call to ‘fcvt’. -- Function: char * gcvt (double VALUE, int NDIGIT, char *BUF) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘gcvt’ is functionally equivalent to ‘sprintf(buf, "%*g", ndigit, value)’. It is provided only for compatibility’s sake. It returns BUF. If NDIGIT decimal digits would exceed the precision of a ‘double’ it is reduced to a system-specific value. As extensions, the GNU C Library provides versions of these three functions that take ‘long double’ arguments. -- Function: char * qecvt (long double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:qecvt | AS-Unsafe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is equivalent to ‘ecvt’ except that it takes a ‘long double’ for the first parameter and that NDIGIT is restricted by the precision of a ‘long double’. -- Function: char * qfcvt (long double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG) Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:qfcvt | AS-Unsafe heap | AC-Unsafe mem | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is equivalent to ‘fcvt’ except that it takes a ‘long double’ for the first parameter and that NDIGIT is restricted by the precision of a ‘long double’. -- Function: char * qgcvt (long double VALUE, int NDIGIT, char *BUF) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function is equivalent to ‘gcvt’ except that it takes a ‘long double’ for the first parameter and that NDIGIT is restricted by the precision of a ‘long double’. The ‘ecvt’ and ‘fcvt’ functions, and their ‘long double’ equivalents, all return a string located in a static buffer which is overwritten by the next call to the function. The GNU C Library provides another set of extended functions which write the converted string into a user-supplied buffer. These have the conventional ‘_r’ suffix. ‘gcvt_r’ is not necessary, because ‘gcvt’ already uses a user-supplied buffer. -- Function: int ecvt_r (double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG, char *BUF, size_t LEN) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘ecvt_r’ function is the same as ‘ecvt’, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by BUF, with length LEN. The return value is ‘-1’ in case of an error and zero otherwise. This function is a GNU extension. -- Function: int fcvt_r (double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG, char *BUF, size_t LEN) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘fcvt_r’ function is the same as ‘fcvt’, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by BUF, with length LEN. The return value is ‘-1’ in case of an error and zero otherwise. This function is a GNU extension. -- Function: int qecvt_r (long double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG, char *BUF, size_t LEN) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘qecvt_r’ function is the same as ‘qecvt’, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by BUF, with length LEN. The return value is ‘-1’ in case of an error and zero otherwise. This function is a GNU extension. -- Function: int qfcvt_r (long double VALUE, int NDIGIT, int *DECPT, int *NEG, char *BUF, size_t LEN) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘qfcvt_r’ function is the same as ‘qfcvt’, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by BUF, with length LEN. The return value is ‘-1’ in case of an error and zero otherwise. This function is a GNU extension.  File: libc.info, Node: Date and Time, Next: Resource Usage And Limitation, Prev: Arithmetic, Up: Top 21 Date and Time **************** This chapter describes functions for manipulating dates and times, including functions for determining what time it is and conversion between different time representations. * Menu: * Time Basics:: Concepts and definitions. * Time Types:: Data types to represent time. * Calculating Elapsed Time:: How to calculate the length of an interval. * Processor And CPU Time:: Time a program has spent executing. * Calendar Time:: Manipulation of “real” dates and times. * Setting an Alarm:: Sending a signal after a specified time. * Sleeping:: Waiting for a period of time.  File: libc.info, Node: Time Basics, Next: Time Types, Up: Date and Time 21.1 Time Basics ================ Discussing time in a technical manual can be difficult because the word “time” in English refers to lots of different things. In this manual, we use a rigorous terminology to avoid confusion, and the only thing we use the simple word “time” for is to talk about the abstract concept. A “calendar time” is a point in the time continuum, for example November 4, 1990, at 18:02.5 UTC. Sometimes this is called “absolute time”. We don’t speak of a “date”, because that is inherent in a calendar time. An “interval” is a contiguous part of the time continuum between two calendar times, for example the hour between 9:00 and 10:00 on July 4, 1980. An “elapsed time” is the length of an interval, for example, 35 minutes. People sometimes sloppily use the word “interval” to refer to the elapsed time of some interval. An “amount of time” is a sum of elapsed times, which need not be of any specific intervals. For example, the amount of time it takes to read a book might be 9 hours, independently of when and in how many sittings it is read. A “period” is the elapsed time of an interval between two events, especially when they are part of a sequence of regularly repeating events. A “simple calendar time” is a calendar time represented as an elapsed time since a fixed, implementation-specific calendar time called the “epoch”. This representation is convenient for doing calculations on calendar times, such as finding the elapsed time between two calendar times. Simple calendar times are independent of time zone; they represent the same instant in time regardless of where on the globe the computer is. POSIX says that simple calendar times do not include leap seconds, but some (otherwise POSIX-conformant) systems can be configured to include leap seconds in simple calendar times. A “broken-down time” is a calendar time represented by its components in the Gregorian calendar: year, month, day, hour, minute, and second. A broken-down time value is relative to a specific time zone, and so it is also sometimes called a “local time”. Broken-down times are most useful for input and output, as they are easier for people to understand, but more difficult to calculate with. “CPU time” measures the amount of time that a single process has actively used a CPU to perform computations. It does not include the time that process has spent waiting for external events. The system tracks the CPU time used by each process separately. “Processor time” measures the amount of time _any_ CPU has been in use by _any_ process. It is a basic system resource, since there’s a limit to how much can exist in any given interval (the elapsed time of the interval times the number of CPUs in the computer) People often call this CPU time, but we reserve the latter term in this manual for the definition above.  File: libc.info, Node: Time Types, Next: Calculating Elapsed Time, Prev: Time Basics, Up: Date and Time 21.2 Time Types =============== ISO C and POSIX define several data types for representing elapsed times, simple calendar times, and broken-down times. -- Data Type: clock_t ‘clock_t’ is used to measure processor and CPU time. It may be an integer or a floating-point type. Its values are counts of “clock ticks” since some arbitrary event in the past. The number of clock ticks per second is system-specific. *Note Processor And CPU Time::, for further detail. -- Data Type: time_t ‘time_t’ is the simplest data type used to represent simple calendar time. In ISO C, ‘time_t’ can be either an integer or a floating-point type, and the meaning of ‘time_t’ values is not specified. The only things a strictly conforming program can do with ‘time_t’ values are: pass them to ‘difftime’ to get the elapsed time between two simple calendar times (*note Calculating Elapsed Time::), and pass them to the functions that convert them to broken-down time (*note Broken-down Time::). On POSIX-conformant systems, ‘time_t’ is an integer type and its values represent the number of seconds elapsed since the “epoch”, which is 00:00:00 on January 1, 1970, Coordinated Universal Time. The GNU C Library additionally guarantees that ‘time_t’ is a signed type, and that all of its functions operate correctly on negative ‘time_t’ values, which are interpreted as times before the epoch. -- Data Type: struct timespec ‘struct timespec’ represents a simple calendar time, or an elapsed time, with sub-second resolution. It is declared in ‘time.h’ and has the following members: ‘time_t tv_sec’ The number of whole seconds elapsed since the epoch (for a simple calendar time) or since some other starting point (for an elapsed time). ‘long int tv_nsec’ The number of nanoseconds elapsed since the time given by the ‘tv_sec’ member. When ‘struct timespec’ values are produced by GNU C Library functions, the value in this field will always be greater than or equal to zero, and less than 1,000,000,000. When ‘struct timespec’ values are supplied to GNU C Library functions, the value in this field must be in the same range. -- Data Type: struct timeval ‘struct timeval’ is an older type for representing a simple calendar time, or an elapsed time, with sub-second resolution. It is almost the same as ‘struct timespec’, but provides only microsecond resolution. It is declared in ‘sys/time.h’ and has the following members: ‘time_t tv_sec’ The number of whole seconds elapsed since the epoch (for a simple calendar time) or since some other starting point (for an elapsed time). ‘long int tv_usec’ The number of microseconds elapsed since the time given by the ‘tv_sec’ member. When ‘struct timeval’ values are produced by GNU C Library functions, the value in this field will always be greater than or equal to zero, and less than 1,000,000. When ‘struct timeval’ values are supplied to GNU C Library functions, the value in this field must be in the same range. -- Data Type: struct tm This is the data type used to represent a broken-down time. It has separate fields for year, month, day, and so on. *Note Broken-down Time::, for further details.  File: libc.info, Node: Calculating Elapsed Time, Next: Processor And CPU Time, Prev: Time Types, Up: Date and Time 21.3 Calculating Elapsed Time ============================= Often, one wishes to calculate an elapsed time as the difference between two simple calendar times. The GNU C Library provides only one function for this purpose. -- Function: double difftime (time_t END, time_t BEGIN) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘difftime’ function returns the number of seconds of elapsed time from calendar time BEGIN to calendar time END, as a value of type ‘double’. On POSIX-conformant systems, the advantage of using ‘difftime (END, BEGIN)’ over ‘END - BEGIN’ is that it will produce the mathematically correct result even if END and BEGIN are so far apart that a simple subtraction would overflow. However, if they are so far apart that a ‘double’ cannot exactly represent the difference, the result will be inexact. On other systems, ‘time_t’ values might be encoded in a way that prevents subtraction from working directly, and then ‘difftime’ would be the only way to compute their difference. The GNU C Library does not provide any functions for computing the difference between two values of type ‘struct timeval’ or ‘struct timespec’. Here is the recommended way to do this calculation by hand. It works even on some peculiar operating systems where the ‘tv_sec’ member has an unsigned type. /* Subtract the ‘struct timeval’ values X and Y, storing the result in RESULT. Return 1 if the difference is negative, otherwise 0. */ int timeval_subtract (struct timeval *result, struct timeval *x, struct timeval *y) { /* Perform the carry for the later subtraction by updating Y. */ if (x->tv_usec < y->tv_usec) { int nsec = (y->tv_usec - x->tv_usec) / 1000000 + 1; y->tv_usec -= 1000000 * nsec; y->tv_sec += nsec; } if (x->tv_usec - y->tv_usec > 1000000) { int nsec = (x->tv_usec - y->tv_usec) / 1000000; y->tv_usec += 1000000 * nsec; y->tv_sec -= nsec; } /* Compute the time remaining to wait. ‘tv_usec’ is certainly positive. */ result->tv_sec = x->tv_sec - y->tv_sec; result->tv_usec = x->tv_usec - y->tv_usec; /* Return 1 if result is negative. */ return x->tv_sec < y->tv_sec; }  File: libc.info, Node: Processor And CPU Time, Next: Calendar Time, Prev: Calculating Elapsed Time, Up: Date and Time 21.4 Processor And CPU Time =========================== If you’re trying to optimize your program or measure its efficiency, it’s very useful to know how much processor time it uses. For that, calendar time and elapsed times are useless because a process may spend time waiting for I/O or for other processes to use the CPU. However, you can get the information with the functions in this section. CPU time (*note Time Basics::) is represented by the data type ‘clock_t’, which is a number of “clock ticks”. It gives the total amount of time a process has actively used a CPU since some arbitrary event. On GNU systems, that event is the creation of the process. While arbitrary in general, the event is always the same event for any particular process, so you can always measure how much time on the CPU a particular computation takes by examining the process’ CPU time before and after the computation. On GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd systems, ‘clock_t’ is equivalent to ‘long int’ and ‘CLOCKS_PER_SEC’ is an integer value. But in other systems, both ‘clock_t’ and the macro ‘CLOCKS_PER_SEC’ can be either integer or floating-point types. Casting CPU time values to ‘double’, as in the example above, makes sure that operations such as arithmetic and printing work properly and consistently no matter what the underlying representation is. Note that the clock can wrap around. On a 32bit system with ‘CLOCKS_PER_SEC’ set to one million this function will return the same value approximately every 72 minutes. For additional functions to examine a process’ use of processor time, and to control it, see *note Resource Usage And Limitation::. * Menu: * CPU Time:: The ‘clock’ function. * Processor Time:: The ‘times’ function.  File: libc.info, Node: CPU Time, Next: Processor Time, Up: Processor And CPU Time 21.4.1 CPU Time Inquiry ----------------------- To get a process’ CPU time, you can use the ‘clock’ function. This facility is declared in the header file ‘time.h’. In typical usage, you call the ‘clock’ function at the beginning and end of the interval you want to time, subtract the values, and then divide by ‘CLOCKS_PER_SEC’ (the number of clock ticks per second) to get processor time, like this: #include clock_t start, end; double cpu_time_used; start = clock(); ... /* Do the work. */ end = clock(); cpu_time_used = ((double) (end - start)) / CLOCKS_PER_SEC; Do not use a single CPU time as an amount of time; it doesn’t work that way. Either do a subtraction as shown above or query processor time directly. *Note Processor Time::. Different computers and operating systems vary wildly in how they keep track of CPU time. It’s common for the internal processor clock to have a resolution somewhere between a hundredth and millionth of a second. -- Macro: int CLOCKS_PER_SEC The value of this macro is the number of clock ticks per second measured by the ‘clock’ function. POSIX requires that this value be one million independent of the actual resolution. -- Function: clock_t clock (void) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This function returns the calling process’ current CPU time. If the CPU time is not available or cannot be represented, ‘clock’ returns the value ‘(clock_t)(-1)’.  File: libc.info, Node: Processor Time, Prev: CPU Time, Up: Processor And CPU Time 21.4.2 Processor Time Inquiry ----------------------------- The ‘times’ function returns information about a process’ consumption of processor time in a ‘struct tms’ object, in addition to the process’ CPU time. *Note Time Basics::. You should include the header file ‘sys/times.h’ to use this facility. -- Data Type: struct tms The ‘tms’ structure is used to return information about process times. It contains at least the following members: ‘clock_t tms_utime’ This is the total processor time the calling process has used in executing the instructions of its program. ‘clock_t tms_stime’ This is the processor time the system has used on behalf of the calling process. ‘clock_t tms_cutime’ This is the sum of the ‘tms_utime’ values and the ‘tms_cutime’ values of all terminated child processes of the calling process, whose status has been reported to the parent process by ‘wait’ or ‘waitpid’; see *note Process Completion::. In other words, it represents the total processor time used in executing the instructions of all the terminated child processes of the calling process, excluding child processes which have not yet been reported by ‘wait’ or ‘waitpid’. ‘clock_t tms_cstime’ This is similar to ‘tms_cutime’, but represents the total processor time the system has used on behalf of all the terminated child processes of the calling process. All of the times are given in numbers of clock ticks. Unlike CPU time, these are the actual amounts of time; not relative to any event. *Note Creating a Process::. -- Macro: int CLK_TCK This is an obsolete name for the number of clock ticks per second. Use ‘sysconf (_SC_CLK_TCK)’ instead. -- Function: clock_t times (struct tms *BUFFER) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘times’ function stores the processor time information for the calling process in BUFFER. The return value is the number of clock ticks since an arbitrary point in the past, e.g. since system start-up. ‘times’ returns ‘(clock_t)(-1)’ to indicate failure. *Portability Note:* The ‘clock’ function described in *note CPU Time:: is specified by the ISO C standard. The ‘times’ function is a feature of POSIX.1. On GNU systems, the CPU time is defined to be equivalent to the sum of the ‘tms_utime’ and ‘tms_stime’ fields returned by ‘times’.  File: libc.info, Node: Calendar Time, Next: Setting an Alarm, Prev: Processor And CPU Time, Up: Date and Time 21.5 Calendar Time ================== This section describes the functions for getting, setting, and manipulating calendar times. * Menu: * Getting the Time:: Functions for finding out what time it is. * Setting and Adjusting the Time:: Functions for setting and adjusting the system clock. * Broken-down Time:: Facilities for manipulating local time. * Formatting Calendar Time:: Converting times to strings. * Parsing Date and Time:: Convert textual time and date information back into broken-down time values. * TZ Variable:: How users specify the time zone. * Time Zone Functions:: Functions to examine or specify the time zone. * Time Functions Example:: An example program showing use of some of the time functions.  File: libc.info, Node: Getting the Time, Next: Setting and Adjusting the Time, Up: Calendar Time 21.5.1 Getting the Time ----------------------- The GNU C Library provides several functions for getting the current calendar time, with different levels of resolution. -- Function: time_t time (time_t *RESULT) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This is the simplest function for getting the current calendar time. It returns the calendar time as a value of type ‘time_t’; on POSIX systems, that means it has a resolution of one second. It uses the same clock as ‘clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME_COARSE)’, when the clock is available or ‘clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME)’ otherwise. If the argument RESULT is not a null pointer, the calendar time value is also stored in ‘*RESULT’. This function cannot fail. Some applications need more precise timekeeping than is possible with a ‘time_t’ alone. Some applications also need more control over what is meant by “the current time.” For these applications, POSIX provides a function ‘clock_gettime’ that can retrieve the time with up to nanosecond precision, from a variety of different clocks. Clocks can be system-wide, measuring time the same for all processes; or they can be per-process or per-thread, measuring CPU time consumed by a particular process, or some other similar resource. Each clock has its own resolution and epoch. You can find the resolution of a clock with the function ‘clock_getres’. There is no function to get the epoch for a clock; either it is fixed and documented, or the clock is not meant to be used to measure absolute times. -- Data Type: clockid_t The type ‘clockid_t’ is used for constants that indicate which of several system clocks one wishes to use. All systems that support this family of functions will define at least this clock constant: -- Macro: clockid_t CLOCK_REALTIME This clock uses the POSIX epoch, 00:00:00 on January 1, 1970, Coordinated Universal Time. It is close to, but not necessarily in lock-step with, the clocks of ‘time’ (above) and of ‘gettimeofday’ (below). A second clock constant which is not universal, but still very common, is for a clock measuring “monotonic time”. Monotonic time is useful for measuring elapsed times, because it guarantees that those measurements are not affected by changes to the system clock. -- Macro: clockid_t CLOCK_MONOTONIC System-wide clock that continuously measures the advancement of calendar time, ignoring discontinuous changes to the system’s setting for absolute calendar time. The epoch for this clock is an unspecified point in the past. The epoch may change if the system is rebooted or suspended. Therefore, ‘CLOCK_MONOTONIC’ cannot be used to measure absolute time, only elapsed time. Systems may support more than just these two clocks. -- Function: int clock_gettime (clockid_t CLOCK, struct timespec *TS) Get the current time accoding to the clock identified by CLOCK, storing it as seconds and nanoseconds in ‘*TS’. *Note Time Types::, for a description of ‘struct timespec’. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error condition is defined for this function: ‘EINVAL’ The clock identified by CLOCK is not supported. ‘clock_gettime’ reports the time scaled to seconds and nanoseconds, but the actual resolution of each clock may not be as fine as one nanosecond, and may not be the same for all clocks. POSIX also provides a function for finding out the actual resolution of a clock: -- Function: int clock_getres (clockid_t CLOCK, struct timespec *RES) Get the actual resolution of the clock identified by CLOCK, storing it in ‘*TS’. For instance, if the clock hardware for ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ uses a quartz crystal that oscillates at 32.768 kHz, then its resolution would be 30.518 microseconds, and ‘clock_getres (CLOCK_REALTIME, &r)’ would set ‘r.tv_sec’ to 0 and ‘r.tv_nsec’ to 30518. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error condition is defined for this function: ‘EINVAL’ The clock identified by CLOCK is not supported. These functions, and the constants that identify particular clocks, are declared in ‘time.h’. *Portability Note:* On some systems, including systems that use older versions of the GNU C Library, programs that use ‘clock_gettime’ or ‘clock_setres’ must be linked with the ‘-lrt’ library. This has not been necessary with the GNU C Library since version 2.17. The GNU C Library also provides an older, but still widely used, function for getting the current time with a resolution of microseconds. This function is declared in ‘sys/time.h’. -- Function: int gettimeofday (struct timeval *TP, void *TZP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Get the current calendar time, storing it as seconds and microseconds in ‘*TP’. *Note Time Types::, for a description of ‘struct timeval’. The clock of ‘gettimeofday’ is close to, but not necessarily in lock-step with, the clocks of ‘time’ and of ‘clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME)’ (see above). On some historic systems, if TZP was not a null pointer, information about a system-wide time zone would be written to ‘*TZP’. This feature is obsolete and not supported on GNU systems. You should always supply a null pointer for this argument. Instead, use the facilities described in *note Time Zone Functions:: and in *note Broken-down Time:: for working with time zones. This function cannot fail, and its return value is always ‘0’. *Portability Note:* As of the 2008 revision of POSIX, this function is considered obsolete. The GNU C Library will continue to provide this function indefinitely, but new programs should use ‘clock_gettime’ instead.  File: libc.info, Node: Setting and Adjusting the Time, Next: Broken-down Time, Prev: Getting the Time, Up: Calendar Time 21.5.2 Setting and Adjusting the Time ------------------------------------- The clock hardware inside a modern computer is quite reliable, but it can still be wrong. The functions in this section allow one to set the system’s idea of the current calendar time, and to adjust the rate at which the system counts seconds, so that the calendar time will both be accurate, and remain accurate. The functions in this section require special privileges to use. *Note Users and Groups::. -- Function: int clock_settime (clockid_t CLOCK, const struct timespec *TS) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Change the current calendar time, according to the clock identified by CLOCK, to be the simple calendar time in ‘*TS’. Not all of the system’s clocks can be changed. For instance, the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock can be changed (with the appropriate privileges), but the ‘CLOCK_MONOTONIC’ clock cannot. Because simple calendar times are independent of time zone, this function should not be used when the time zone changes (e.g. if the computer is physically moved from one zone to another). Instead, use the facilities described in *note Time Zone Functions::. ‘clock_settime’ causes the clock to jump forwards or backwards, which can cause a variety of problems. Changing the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock with ‘clock_settime’ does not affect when timers expire (*note Setting an Alarm::) or when sleeping processes wake up (*note Sleeping::), which avoids some of the problems. Still, for small changes made while the system is running, it is better to use ‘ntp_adjtime’ (below) to make a smooth transition from one time to another. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error conditions are defined for this function: ‘EINVAL’ The clock identified by CLOCK is not supported or cannot be set at all, or the simple calendar time in ‘*TS’ is invalid (for instance, ‘ts->tv_nsec’ is negative or greater than 999,999,999). ‘EPERM’ This process does not have the privileges required to set the clock identified by CLOCK. *Portability Note*: On some systems, including systems that use older versions of the GNU C Library, programs that use ‘clock_settime’ must be linked with the ‘-lrt’ library. This has not been necessary with the GNU C Library since version 2.17. For systems that remain up and running for long periods, it is not enough to set the time once; one should also “discipline” the clock so that it does not drift away from the true calendar time. The ‘ntp_gettime’ and ‘ntp_adjtime’ functions provide an interface to monitor and discipline the system clock. For example, you can fine-tune the rate at which the clock “ticks,” and make small adjustments to the current reported calendar time smoothly, by temporarily speeding up or slowing down the clock. These functions’ names begin with ‘ntp_’ because they were designed for use by programs implementing the Network Time Protocol to synchronize a system’s clock with other systems’ clocks and/or with external high-precision clock hardware. These functions, and the constants and structures they use, are declared in ‘sys/timex.h’. -- Data Type: struct ntptimeval This structure is used to report information about the system clock. It contains the following members: ‘struct timeval time’ The current calendar time, as if retrieved by ‘gettimeofday’. The ‘struct timeval’ data type is described in *note Time Types::. ‘long int maxerror’ This is the maximum error, measured in microseconds. Unless updated via ‘ntp_adjtime’ periodically, this value will reach some platform-specific maximum value. ‘long int esterror’ This is the estimated error, measured in microseconds. This value can be set by ‘ntp_adjtime’ to indicate the estimated offset of the system clock from the true calendar time. -- Function: int ntp_gettime (struct ntptimeval *TPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘ntp_gettime’ function sets the structure pointed to by TPTR to current values. The elements of the structure afterwards contain the values the timer implementation in the kernel assumes. They might or might not be correct. If they are not, an ‘ntp_adjtime’ call is necessary. The return value is ‘0’ on success and other values on failure. The following ‘errno’ error conditions are defined for this function: ‘TIME_ERROR’ The precision clock model is not properly set up at the moment, thus the clock must be considered unsynchronized, and the values should be treated with care. -- Data Type: struct timex This structure is used to control and monitor the system clock. It contains the following members: ‘unsigned int modes’ This variable controls whether and which values are set. Several symbolic constants have to be combined with _binary or_ to specify the effective mode. These constants start with ‘MOD_’. ‘long int offset’ This value indicates the current offset of the system clock from the true calendar time. The value is given in microseconds. If bit ‘MOD_OFFSET’ is set in ‘modes’, the offset (and possibly other dependent values) can be set. The offset’s absolute value must not exceed ‘MAXPHASE’. ‘long int frequency’ This value indicates the difference in frequency between the true calendar time and the system clock. The value is expressed as scaled PPM (parts per million, 0.0001%). The scaling is ‘1 << SHIFT_USEC’. The value can be set with bit ‘MOD_FREQUENCY’, but the absolute value must not exceed ‘MAXFREQ’. ‘long int maxerror’ This is the maximum error, measured in microseconds. A new value can be set using bit ‘MOD_MAXERROR’. Unless updated via ‘ntp_adjtime’ periodically, this value will increase steadily and reach some platform-specific maximum value. ‘long int esterror’ This is the estimated error, measured in microseconds. This value can be set using bit ‘MOD_ESTERROR’. ‘int status’ This variable reflects the various states of the clock machinery. There are symbolic constants for the significant bits, starting with ‘STA_’. Some of these flags can be updated using the ‘MOD_STATUS’ bit. ‘long int constant’ This value represents the bandwidth or stiffness of the PLL (phase locked loop) implemented in the kernel. The value can be changed using bit ‘MOD_TIMECONST’. ‘long int precision’ This value represents the accuracy or the maximum error when reading the system clock. The value is expressed in microseconds. ‘long int tolerance’ This value represents the maximum frequency error of the system clock in scaled PPM. This value is used to increase the ‘maxerror’ every second. ‘struct timeval time’ The current calendar time. ‘long int tick’ The elapsed time between clock ticks in microseconds. A clock tick is a periodic timer interrupt on which the system clock is based. ‘long int ppsfreq’ This is the first of a few optional variables that are present only if the system clock can use a PPS (pulse per second) signal to discipline the system clock. The value is expressed in scaled PPM and it denotes the difference in frequency between the system clock and the PPS signal. ‘long int jitter’ This value expresses a median filtered average of the PPS signal’s dispersion in microseconds. ‘int shift’ This value is a binary exponent for the duration of the PPS calibration interval, ranging from ‘PPS_SHIFT’ to ‘PPS_SHIFTMAX’. ‘long int stabil’ This value represents the median filtered dispersion of the PPS frequency in scaled PPM. ‘long int jitcnt’ This counter represents the number of pulses where the jitter exceeded the allowed maximum ‘MAXTIME’. ‘long int calcnt’ This counter reflects the number of successful calibration intervals. ‘long int errcnt’ This counter represents the number of calibration errors (caused by large offsets or jitter). ‘long int stbcnt’ This counter denotes the number of calibrations where the stability exceeded the threshold. -- Function: int ntp_adjtime (struct timex *TPTR) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. The ‘ntp_adjtime’ function sets the structure specified by TPTR to current values. In addition, ‘ntp_adjtime’ updates some settings to match what you pass to it in ‘*TPTR’. Use the ‘modes’ element of ‘*TPTR’ to select what settings to update. You can set ‘offset’, ‘freq’, ‘maxerror’, ‘esterror’, ‘status’, ‘constant’, and ‘tick’. ‘modes’ = zero means set nothing. Only the superuser can update settings. The return value is ‘0’ on success and other values on failure. The following ‘errno’ error conditions are defined for this function: ‘TIME_ERROR’ The high accuracy clock model is not properly set up at the moment, thus the clock must be considered unsynchronized, and the values should be treated with care. Another reason could be that the specified new values are not allowed. ‘EPERM’ The process specified a settings update, but is not superuser. For more details see RFC1305 (Network Time Protocol, Version 3) and related documents. *Portability note:* Early versions of the GNU C Library did not have this function, but did have the synonymous ‘adjtimex’. -- Function: int adjtime (const struct timeval *DELTA, struct timeval *OLDDELTA) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. This simpler version of ‘ntp_adjtime’ speeds up or slows down the system clock for a short time, in order to correct it by a small amount. This avoids a discontinuous change in the calendar time reported by the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock, at the price of having to wait longer for the time to become correct. The DELTA argument specifies a relative adjustment to be made to the clock time. If negative, the system clock is slowed down for a while until it has lost this much elapsed time. If positive, the system clock is speeded up for a while. If the OLDDELTA argument is not a null pointer, the ‘adjtime’ function returns information about any previous time adjustment that has not yet completed. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error condition is defined for this function: ‘EPERM’ This process does not have the privileges required to adjust the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock. For compatibility, the GNU C Library also provides several older functions for controlling the system time. New programs should prefer to use the functions above. -- Function: int stime (const time_t *NEWTIME) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Change the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ calendar time to be the simple calendar time in ‘*NEWTIME’. Calling this function is exactly the same as calling ‘clock_settime (CLOCK_REALTIME)’, except that the new time can only be set to a precision of one second. This function is no longer available on GNU systems, but it may be the _only_ way to set the time on very old Unix systems, so we continue to document it. If it is available, it is declared in ‘time.h’. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error condition is defined for this function: ‘EPERM’ This process does not have the privileges required to adjust the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock. -- Function: int adjtimex (struct timex *TIMEX) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. ‘adjtimex’ is an older name for ‘ntp_adjtime’. This function is only available on GNU/Linux systems. It is declared in ‘sys/timex.h’. -- Function: int settimeofday (const struct timeval *TP, const void *TZP) Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | *Note POSIX Safety Concepts::. Change the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ calendar time to be the simple calendar time in ‘*NEWTIME’. This function is declared in ‘sys/time.h’. When TZP is a null pointer, calling this function is exactly the same as calling ‘clock_settime (CLOCK_REALTIME)’, except that the new time can only be set to a precision of one microsecond. When TZP is not a null pointer, the data it points to _may_ be used to set a system-wide idea of the current timezone. This feature is obsolete and not supported on GNU systems. Instead, use the facilities described in *note Time Zone Functions:: and in *note Broken-down Time:: for working with time zones. The return value is ‘0’ on success and ‘-1’ on failure. The following ‘errno’ error conditions are defined for this function: ‘EPERM’ This process does not have the privileges required to set the ‘CLOCK_REALTIME’ clock. ‘EINVAL’ Neither TP nor TZP is a null pointer. (For historical reasons, it is not possible to set the current time and the current time zone in the same call.) ‘ENOSYS’ The operating system does not support setting time zone information, and TZP is not a null pointer.