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TAN(3) | Linux Programmer's Manual | TAN(3) |
NAME¶
tan, tanf, tanl - tangent function
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <math.h> double tan(double x);
float tanf(float x);
long double tanl(long double x);
Link with -lm.
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
tanf(), tanl():
or cc -std=c99
DESCRIPTION¶
The tan() function returns the tangent of x, where x is given in radians.
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, these functions return the tangent of x.
If x is a NaN, a NaN is returned.
If x is positive infinity or negative infinity, a domain error occurs, and a NaN is returned.
If the correct result would overflow, a range error occurs, and the functions return HUGE_VAL, HUGE_VALF, or HUGE_VALL, respectively, with the mathematically correct sign.
ERRORS¶
See math_error(7) for information on how to determine whether an error has occurred when calling these functions.
The following errors can occur:
- Domain error: x is an infinity
- errno is set to EDOM (but see BUGS). An invalid floating-point exception (FE_INVALID) is raised.
- Range error: result overflow
- An overflow floating-point exception (FE_OVERFLOW) is raised.
CONFORMING TO¶
C99, POSIX.1-2001. The variant returning double also conforms to SVr4, 4.3BSD, C89.
BUGS¶
Before version 2.10, the glibc implementation did not set errno to EDOM when a domain error occurred.
SEE ALSO¶
acos(3), asin(3), atan(3), atan2(3), cos(3), ctan(3), sin(3)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2010-09-11 |