| Document revision date: 19 July 1999 | |
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The Sine of a Complex Number routine returns the sine of a complex number (r,i).
MTH$CDSIN complex-sine ,complex-number
MTH$CGSIN complex-sine ,complex-number
Each of the above formats accepts one of the floating-point complex types as input.
None.
complex-sine
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: D_floating complex, G_floating complex access: write only mechanism: by reference
Complex sine of the complex number. The complex sine routines with D-floating complex and G-floating complex input values write the complex sine into this complex-sine argument. For MTH$CDSIN, complex-sine specifies a D-floating complex number. For MTH$CGSIN, complex-sine specifies a G-floating complex number.complex-number
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: D_floating complex, G_floating complex access: read only mechanism: by reference
A complex number (r,i), where r and i are floating-point numbers. The complex-number argument is the address of this complex number. For MTH$CDSIN, complex-number specifies a D-floating complex number. For MTH$CGSIN, complex-number specifies a G-floating complex number.
The complex sine is computed as follows:
complex-sine = (SIN(r) * COSH(i), COS(r) * SINH(i))
SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$CxSIN routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital. MTH$_FLOOVEMAT Floating-point overflow in Math Library: the absolute value of i is greater than about 88.029 for D-floating values, or greater than about 709.089 for G-floating values.
C+
C This Fortran example forms the complex sine of a G-floating
C complex number using MTH$CGSIN and the Fortran random number
C generator RAN.
C
C Declare Z and MTH$CGSIN as complex values. MTH$CGSIN returns
C the sine value of Z: CALL MTH$CGSIN(Z_NEW,Z)
C-
COMPLEX*16 Z,Z_NEW
COMPLEX*16 DCMPLX
REAL*8 R,I
INTEGER M
M = 1234567
C+
C Generate a random complex number with the
C Fortran generic DCMPLX.
C-
R = RAN(M)
I = RAN(M)
Z = DCMPLX(R,I)
C+
C Z is a complex number (r,i) with real part "r" and
C imaginary part "i".
C-
TYPE *, ' The complex number z is',z
TYPE *, ' '
C+
C Compute the complex sine value of Z.
C-
CALL MTH$CGSIN(Z_NEW,Z)
TYPE *, ' The complex sine value of',z,' is',Z_NEW
END
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This Fortran example demonstrates a procedure call to MTH$CGSIN. Because this program uses G-floating numbers, it must be compiled with the statement "Fortran/G filename".
The output generated by this program is as follows:
The complex number z is (0.853540718555450,0.204340159893036) The complex sine value of (0.853540718555450,0.204340159893036) is (0.769400835484975,0.135253340912255)
The Complex Square Root (F-Floating Value) routine returns the complex square root of a complex number (r,i).
MTH$CSQRT complex-number
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: F_floating complex access: write only mechanism: by value
The complex square root of the complex-number argument. MTH$CSQRT returns an F-floating number.
complex-number
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: F_floating complex access: read only mechanism: by reference
Complex number (r,i). The complex-number argument contains the address of this complex number. For MTH$CSQRT, complex-number specifies an F-floating number.
The complex square root is computed as follows.First, calculate ROOT and Q using the following equations:
ROOT = SQRT((ABS(r) + CABS(r,i))/2) Q = i/(2 * ROOT)
Then, the complex result is given as follows:
r i CSQRT((r,i)) =>0 Any (ROOT,Q) <0 =>0 (Q,ROOT) <0 <0 (-Q,-ROOT) See MTH$CxSQRT for the descriptions of the D- and G-floating point versions of this routine.
SS$_FLTOVF_F Floating point overflow can occur. SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$CSQRT routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital.
The Complex Square Root routine returns the complex square root of a complex number (r,i).
MTH$CDSQRT complex-square-root ,complex-number
MTH$CGSQRT complex-square-root ,complex-number
Each of the above formats accepts one of the floating-point complex types as input.
None.
complex-square-root
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: D_floating complex, G_floating complex access: write only mechanism: by reference
Complex square root of the complex number specified by complex-number. The complex square root routines that have D-floating complex and G-floating complex input values write the complex square root into complex-square-root. For MTH$CDSQRT, complex-square-root specifies a D-floating complex number. For MTH$CGSQRT, complex-square-root specifies a G-floating complex number.complex-number
OpenVMS usage: complex_number type: D_floating complex, G_floating complex access: read only mechanism: by reference
Complex number (r,i). The complex-number argument contains the address of this complex number. For MTH$CDSQRT, complex-number specifies a D-floating number. For MTH$CGSQRT, complex-number specifies a G-floating number.
The complex square root is computed as follows.First, calculate ROOT and Q using the following equations:
ROOT = SQRT((ABS(r) + CABS(r,i))/2) Q = i/(2 * ROOT)
Then, the complex result is given as follows:
r i CSQRT((r,i)) =>0 any (ROOT,Q) <0 =>0 (Q,ROOT) <0 <0 (-Q,-ROOT)
SS$_FLTOVF_F Floating point overflow can occur. SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$CxSQRT routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital.
C+
C This Fortran example forms the complex square root of a D-floating
C complex number using MTH$CDSQRT and the Fortran random number
C generator RAN.
C
C Declare Z and Z_NEW as complex values. MTH$CDSQRT returns the
C complex square root of Z: CALL MTH$CDSQRT(Z_NEW,Z).
C-
COMPLEX*16 Z,Z_NEW
COMPLEX*16 DCMPLX
INTEGER M
M = 1234567
C+
C Generate a random complex number with the
C Fortran generic CMPLX.
C-
Z = DCMPLX(RAN(M),RAN(M))
C+
C Z is a complex number (r,i) with real part "r" and imaginary
C part "i".
C-
TYPE *, ' The complex number z is',z
TYPE *, ' '
C+
C Compute the complex complex square root of Z.
C-
CALL MTH$CDSQRT(Z_NEW,Z)
TYPE *, ' The complex square root of',z,' is',Z_NEW
END
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This Fortran example program demonstrates a procedure call to MTH$CDSQRT. The output generated by this program is as follows:
The complex number z is (0.8535407185554504,0.2043401598930359) The complex square root of (0.8535407185554504,0.2043401598930359) is (0.9303763973040062,0.1098158554350485)
The Convert One Double-Precision Value routines convert one double-precision value to the destination data type and return the result as a function value. MTH$CVT_D_G converts a D-floating value to G-floating and MTH$CVT_G_D converts a G-floating value to a D-floating value.
MTH$CVT_D_G floating-point-input-val
MTH$CVT_G_D floating-point-input-val
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: G_floating, D_floating access: write only mechanism: by value
The converted value. MTH$CVT_D_G returns a G-floating value. MTH$CVT_G_D returns a D-floating value.
floating-point-input-val
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: D_floating, G_floating access: read only mechanism: by reference
The input value to be converted. The floating-point-input-val argument is the address of this input value. For MTH$CVT_D_G, the floating-point-input-val argument specifies a D-floating number. For MTH$CVT_G_D, the floating-point-input-val argument specifies a G-floating number.
These routines are designed to function as hardware conversion instructions. They fault on reserved operands. If floating-point overflow is detected, an error is signaled. If floating-point underflow is detected and floating-point underflow is enabled, an error is signaled.
SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$CVT_x_x routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital. MTH$_FLOOVEMAT Floating-point overflow in Math Library. MTH$_FLOUNDMAT Floating-point underflow in Math Library.
The Convert an Array of Double-Precision Values routines convert a contiguous array of double-precision values to the destination data type and return the results as an array. MTH$CVT_DA_GA converts D-floating values to G-floating and MTH$CVT_GA_DA converts G-floating values to D-floating.
MTH$CVT_DA_GA floating-point-input-array ,floating-point-dest-array [,array-size]
MTH$CVT_GA_DA floating-point-input-array ,floating-point-dest-array [,array-size]
MTH$CVT_DA_GA and MTH$CVT_GA_DA return the address of the output array to the floating-point-dest-array argument.
floating-point-input-array
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: D_floating, G_floating access: read only mechanism: by reference, array reference
Input array of values to be converted. The floating-point-input-array argument is the address of an array of floating-point numbers. For MTH$CVT_DA_GA, floating-point-input-array specifies an array of D-floating numbers. For MTH$CVT_GA_DA, floating-point-input-array specifies an array of G-floating numbers.floating-point-dest-array
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: G_floating, D_floating access: write only mechanism: by reference, array reference
Output array of converted values. The floating-point-dest-array argument is the address of an array of floating-point numbers. For MTH$CVT_DA_GA, floating-point-dest-array specifies an array of G-floating numbers. For MTH$CVT_GA_DA, floating-point-dest-array specifies an array of D-floating numbers.array-size
OpenVMS usage: longword_signed type: longword (signed) access: read only mechanism: by reference
Number of array elements to be converted. The default value is 1. The array-size argument is the address of a longword containing this number of elements.
These routines are designed to function as hardware conversion instructions. They fault on reserved operands. If floating-point overflow is detected, an error is signaled. If floating-point underflow is detected and floating-point underflow is enabled, an error is signaled.
SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$CVT_xA_xA routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital. MTH$_FLOOVEMAT Floating-point overflow in Math Library. MTH$_FLOUNDMAT Floating-point underflow in Math Library.
The Exponential routine returns the exponential of the input value.
MTH$EXP floating-point-input-value
MTH$DEXP floating-point-input-value
MTH$GEXP floating-point-input-value
Each of the above formats accepts one of the floating-point types as input.Corresponding JSB Entry Points
MTH$EXP_R4
MTH$DEXP_R6
MTH$GEXP_R6
Each of the above JSB entry points accepts one of the floating-point types as input.
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: F_floating, D_floating, G_floating access: write only mechanism: by value
The exponential of floating-point-input-value. MTH$EXP returns an F-floating number. MTH$DEXP returns a D-floating number. MTH$GEXP returns a G-floating number.
floating-point-input-value
OpenVMS usage: floating_point type: F_floating, D_floating, G_floating access: read only mechanism: by reference
The input value. The floating-point-input-value argument is the address of a floating-point number. For MTH$EXP, floating-point-input-value specifies an F-floating number. For MTH$DEXP, floating-point-input-value specifies a D-floating number. For MTH$GEXP, floating-point-input-value specifies a G-floating number.
The exponential of x is computed as:
Value of x Value Returned X > c(z) Overflow occurs X <= -c(z) 0 |X| < 2 -(f+1) 1 Otherwise 2 Y * 2 U * 2 W where: Y = INTEGER(x*ln2(E)) V = FRAC(x*ln2(E)) * 16 U = INTEGER(V)/16 W = FRAC(V)/16 2W = polynomial approximation of degree 4, 8, or 8 for z = F, D, or G.
See also MTH$xCOSH for definitions of f and c(z).
See MTH$HEXP for the description of the H-floating point version of this routine.
SS$_ROPRAND Reserved operand. The MTH$xEXP routine encountered a floating-point reserved operand due to incorrect user input. A floating-point reserved operand is a floating-point datum with a sign bit of 1 and a biased exponent of 0. Floating-point reserved operands are reserved for future use by Digital. MTH$_FLOOVEMAT Floating-point overflow in Math Library: floating-point-input-value is greater than yyy; LIB$SIGNAL copies the reserved operand to the signal mechanism vector. The result is the reserved operand -0.0 unless a condition handler changes the signal mechanism vector. The values of yyy are approximately:
- MTH$EXP---88.029
- MTH$DEXP---88.029
- MTH$GEXP---709.089
MTH$_FLOUNDMAT Floating-point underflow in Math Library: floating-point-input-value is less than or equal to yyy and the caller (CALL or JSB) has set hardware floating-point underflow enable. The result is set to 0.0. If the caller has not enabled floating-point underflow (the default), a result of 0.0 is returned but no error is signaled. The values of yyy are approximately:
- MTH$EXP--- -- 88.722
- MTH$DEXP--- -- 88.722
- MTH$GEXP--- -- 709.774
IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
PROGRAM-ID. FLOATING_POINT.
*
* Calls MTH$EXP using a Floating Point data type.
* Calls MTH$DEXP using a Double Floating Point data type.
*
ENVIRONMENT DIVISION.
DATA DIVISION.
WORKING-STORAGE SECTION.
01 FLOAT_PT COMP-1.
01 ANSWER_F COMP-1.
01 DOUBLE_PT COMP-2.
01 ANSWER_D COMP-2.
PROCEDURE DIVISION.
P0.
MOVE 12.34 TO FLOAT_PT.
MOVE 3.456 TO DOUBLE_PT.
CALL "MTH$EXP" USING BY REFERENCE FLOAT_PT GIVING ANSWER_F.
DISPLAY " MTH$EXP of ", FLOAT_PT CONVERSION, " is ",
ANSWER_F CONVERSION.
CALL "MTH$DEXP" USING BY REFERENCE DOUBLE_PT GIVING ANSWER_D.
DISPLAY " MTH$DEXP of ", DOUBLE_PT CONVERSION, " is ",
ANSWER_D CONVERSION .
STOP RUN.
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This sample program demonstrates calls to MTH$EXP and MTH$DEXP from COBOL.
The output generated by this program is as follows:
MTH$EXP of 1.234000E+01 is 2.286620E+05 MTH$DEXP of 3.456000000000000E+00 is 3.168996280537917E+01
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