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.\"	$OpenBSD: math.3,v 1.24 2008/07/29 22:12:29 martynas Exp $
.\" Copyright (c) 1985 Regents of the University of California.
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.\"	from: @(#)math.3	6.10 (Berkeley) 5/6/91
.\"
.if n \
.ds Si sig.
.if t \
.ds Si significant
.Dd $Mdocdate: July 29 2008 $
.Dt MATH 3
.Sh NAME
.Nm math
.Nd introduction to mathematical library functions
.Sh DESCRIPTION
These functions constitute the C math library,
.Em libm .
The link editor searches this library under the
.Dq -lm
option.
Declarations for these functions may be obtained from the include file
.Aq Pa math.h .
.Sh LIST OF FUNCTIONS
.Bl -column "copysign(3)" "inverse trigonometric function" "ULPs"
.It \fIName\fP Ta \fIDescription\fP Ta "\fIULPs\fP"
.It acos(3) Ta "inverse trigonometric function" Ta 3
.It acosh(3) Ta "inverse hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It asin(3) Ta "inverse trigonometric function" Ta 3
.It asinh(3) Ta "inverse hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It atan(3) Ta "inverse trigonometric function" Ta 1
.It atan2(3) Ta "inverse trigonometric function" Ta 2
.It atanh(3) Ta "inverse hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It cabs(3) Ta "complex absolute value" Ta 1
.It cbrt(3) Ta "cube root" Ta 1
.It ceil(3) Ta "integer no less than" Ta 0
.It copysign(3) Ta "copy sign bit" Ta 0
.It cos(3) Ta "trigonometric function" Ta 1
.It cosh(3) Ta "hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It erf(3) Ta "error function" Ta 1
.It erfc(3) Ta "complementary error function" Ta 1
.It exp(3) Ta "exponential" Ta 1
.It expm1(3) Ta "exp(x)-1" Ta 1
.It fabs(3) Ta "absolute value" Ta 0
.It floor(3) Ta "integer no greater than" Ta 0
.It fmod(3) Ta "remainder" Ta 0
.It fpclassify(3) Ta "classify real floating type" Ta 0
.It hypot(3) Ta "Euclidean distance" Ta 1
.It ilogb(3) Ta "exponent extraction" Ta 0
.It isfinite(3) Ta "test for finite value" Ta 0
.It isinf(3) Ta "check for infinity" Ta 0
.It isnan(3) Ta "check for not-a-number" Ta 0
.It isnormal(3) Ta "test for normal value" Ta 0
.It j0(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.It j1(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.It jn(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.It lgamma(3) Ta "log gamma function" Ta 1
.It log(3) Ta "natural logarithm" Ta 1
.It log10(3) Ta "logarithm to base 10" Ta 3
.It log1p(3) Ta "log(1+x)" Ta 1
.It nan(3) Ta "generate NaN" Ta 0
.It nextafter(3) Ta "next representable number" Ta 0
.It pow(3) Ta "exponential x**y" Ta 60-500
.It remainder(3) Ta "remainder" Ta 0
.It remquo(3) Ta "remainder" Ta 0
.It rint(3) Ta "round to nearest integer" Ta 0
.It round(3) Ta "round to nearest integer" Ta 0
.It scalbn(3) Ta "exponent adjustment" Ta 0
.It signbit(3) Ta "test sign" Ta 0
.It sin(3) Ta "trigonometric function" Ta 1
.It sinh(3) Ta "hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It sqrt(3) Ta "square root" Ta 1
.It tan(3) Ta "trigonometric function" Ta 3
.It tanh(3) Ta "hyperbolic function" Ta 3
.It tgamma(3) Ta "gamma function" Ta 4
.It trunc(3) Ta "nearest integral value" Ta 3
.It y0(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.It y1(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.It yn(3) Ta "Bessel function" Ta ???
.El
.Sh NOTES
In
.Bx 4.3 ,
distributed from the University of California
in late 1985, most of the foregoing functions come in two
versions, one for the double-precision
.Dq D
format in the
.Tn DEC VAX-11
family of computers, another for double-precision
arithmetic conforming to
.St -ieee754 .
The two versions behave very
similarly, as should be expected from programs more accurate
and robust than was the norm when
.Ux
was born.
For
instance, the programs are accurate to within the number of
.Em ulp Ns s
tabulated above; a
.Em ulp
is one
.Em U Ns nit
in the
.Em L Ns ast
.Em P Ns lace .
The functions have been cured of anomalies that
afflicted the older math library in which incidents like
the following had been reported:
.Bd -unfilled -offset indent
sqrt(-1.0) = 0.0 and log(-1.0) = -1.7e38.
cos(1.0e-11) \*(Gt cos(0.0) \*(Gt 1.0.
pow(x,1.0) \*(Ne x when x = 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ..., 9.0.
pow(-1.0,1.0e10) trapped on Integer Overflow.
sqrt(1.0e30) and sqrt(1.0e-30) were very slow.
.Ed
.Pp
However, the two versions do differ in ways that have to be
explained, to which end the following notes are provided.
.Ss DEC VAX-11 D_floating-point:
This is the format for which the original math library
was developed, and to which this manual is still principally
dedicated.
It is
.Em the
double-precision format for the PDP-11
and the earlier VAX-11 machines; VAX-11s after 1983 were
provided with an optional
.Dq G
format closer to the
.Tn IEEE
double-precision format.
The earlier
.Tn DEC MicroVAXs
have no D format, only G double-precision.
(Why? Why not?)
.Pp
Properties of D_floating-point:
.Bl -tag -width "Precision:" -offset indent -compact
.It Wordsize:
64 bits, 8 bytes.
.It Radix:
Binary.
.It Precision:
56 \*(Si bits, roughly 17 \*(Si decimal digits.
If x and x' are consecutive positive D_floating-point
numbers (they differ by 1 \fIulp\fR), then
.Li 1.3e-17 \*(Lt 0.5**56 \*(Lt (x'-x)/x \*(Le 0.5**55 \*(Lt 2.8e-17.
.It Range:
Overflow threshold = 2.0**127 = 1.7e38.
.br
Underflow threshold = 0.5**128 = 2.9e-39.
.br
NOTE: THIS RANGE IS COMPARATIVELY NARROW.
.br
Overflow customarily stops computation.
.br
Underflow is customarily flushed quietly to zero.
.br
CAUTION:
.Bd -filled -offset indent -compact
It is possible to have x \*(Ne y and yet x-y = 0 because of underflow.
Similarly x \*(Gt y \*(Gt 0 cannot prevent either x\(**y = 0
or y/x = 0 from happening without warning.
.Ed
.It Zero is represented ambiguously.
Although 2**55 different representations of zero are accepted by
the hardware, only the obvious representation is ever produced.
There is no -0 on a VAX.
.It \*(If is not part of the VAX architecture.
.It Reserved operands:
Of the 2**55 that the hardware
recognizes, only one of them is ever produced.
Any floating-point operation upon a reserved
operand, even a MOVF or MOVD, customarily stops
computation, so they are not much used.
.It Exceptions:
Divisions by zero and operations that
overflow are invalid operations that customarily
stop computation or, in earlier machines, produce
reserved operands that will stop computation.
.It Rounding:
Every rational operation (+, -, \(**, /) on a
VAX (but not necessarily on a PDP-11), if not an
over/underflow nor division by zero, is rounded to
within half a \fIulp\fR, and when the rounding error is
exactly half a \fIulp\fR then rounding is away from 0.
.El
.Pp
Except for its narrow range, D_floating-point is one of the
better computer arithmetics designed in the 1960's.
Its properties are reflected fairly faithfully in the elementary
functions for a VAX distributed in
.Bx 4.3 .
They over/underflow only if their results have to lie out of range
or very nearly so, and then they behave much as any rational
arithmetic operation that over/underflowed would behave.
Similarly, expressions like log(0) and atanh(1) behave
like 1/0; and sqrt(-3) and acos(3) behave like 0/0;
they all produce reserved operands and/or stop computation!
The situation is described in more detail in manual pages.
.Bd -filled -offset indent
\fIThis response seems excessively punitive, so it is destined
to be replaced at some time in the foreseeable future by a
more flexible but still uniform scheme being developed to
handle all floating-point arithmetic exceptions neatly.
See
.Xr infnan 3
for the present state of affairs.\fR
.Ed
.Pp
How do the functions in
.Bx 4.3 's
new
.Em libm
for UNIX compare with their counterparts in
.Tn DEC's VAX/VMS
library?
Some of the
.Tn VMS
functions are a little faster, some are
a little more accurate, some are more puritanical about
exceptions (like pow(0.0,0.0) and atan2(0.0,0.0)),
and most occupy much more memory than their counterparts in
.Em libm .
The
.Tn VMS
implementations interpolate in large table to achieve
speed and accuracy; the
.Em libm
implementations use tricky formulas compact enough that all of them may some
day fit into a ROM.
.Pp
More importantly,
.Tn DEC
considers the
.Tn VMS
implementation proprietary and guards it zealously against unauthorized use.
In contrast, the
.Em libm
included in
.Bx 4.3
is freely distributable;
it may be copied freely provided their provenance is always
acknowledged.
Therefore, no user of
.Ux
on a machine whose arithmetic resembles VAX D_floating-point need use
anything worse than the new
.Em libm .
.Ss IEEE STANDARD 754 Floating-Point Arithmetic:
This is the most widely adopted standard for computer arithmetic.
VLSI chips that conform to some version of that standard have been
produced by a host of manufacturers, among them:
.Pp
.Bl -column -offset indent -compact "Intel i8070, i80287" "Western Electric (AT&T) WE32106"
.It "Intel i8087, i80287" Ta "National Semiconductor 32081"
.It "Motorola 68881" Ta "Weitek WTL-1032, ... , -1165"
.It "Zilog Z8070" Ta "Western Electric (AT&T) WE32106"
.El
.Pp
Other implementations range from software, done thoroughly
for the Apple Macintosh, through VLSI in the Hewlett-Packard
9000 series, to the ELXSI 6400 running ECL at 3 Megaflops.
Several other companies have adopted the formats of
.St -ieee754
without, alas, adhering to the standard's method
of handling rounding and exceptions such as over/underflow.
The
.Tn DEC VAX
G_floating-point format is very similar to
.St -ieee754
Double format.
It is so similar that the C programs for the
.Tn IEEE
versions of most of the elementary functions listed
above could easily be converted to run on a
.Tn MicroVAX ,
though nobody has volunteered to do that yet.
.Pp
The code in
.Bx 4.3 's
.Em libm
for machines that conform to
.St -ieee754
is intended primarily for the National Semi. 32081 and WTL 1164/65.
To use this code with the Intel or Zilog chips, or with the Apple
Macintosh or ELXSI 6400, is to forego the use of better code
provided (perhaps for free) by those companies and designed by some
of the authors of the code above.
Except for
.Fn atan ,
.Fn cabs ,
.Fn cbrt ,
.Fn erf ,
.Fn erfc ,
.Fn hypot ,
.Fn j0-jn ,
.Fn lgamma ,
.Fn pow
and
.Fn y0
-
.Fn yn ,
the Motorola 68881 has all the functions in
.Em libm
on chip, and is faster and more accurate to boot;
it, Apple, the i8087, Z8070 and WE32106 all use 64 \*(Si bits.
The main virtue of
.Bx 4.3 's
.Em libm
is that it is freely distributable;
it may be copied freely provided its provenance is always acknowledged.
Therefore no user of
.Ux
on a machine that conforms to
.St -ieee754
need use anything worse than the new
.Em libm .
.Pp
Properties of
.St -ieee754
Double-Precision:
.Bl -tag -width "Precision:" -offset indent -compact
.It Wordsize:
64 bits, 8 bytes.
.It Radix:
Binary.
.It Precision:
53 \*(Si bits, roughly equivalent to 16 \*(Si decimals.
.br
If x and x' are consecutive positive Double-Precision
numbers (they differ by 1 \fIulp\fR, then
.br
.Li 1.1e-16 \*(Lt 0.5**53 \*(Lt (x'-x)/x \*(Le 0.5**52 \*(Lt 2.3e-16.
.It Range:
Overflow threshold = 2.0**1024 = 1.8e308
.br
Underflow threshold = 0.5**1022 = 2.2e-308
.br
Overflow goes by default to a signed \*(If.
.br
Underflow is
.Em Gradual ,
rounding to the nearest integer multiple of 0.5**1074 = 4.9e-324.
.It Zero is represented ambiguously as +0 or -0.
Its sign transforms correctly through multiplication or
division, and is preserved by addition of zeros
with like signs; but x-x yields +0 for every
finite x.
The only operations that reveal zero's
sign are division by zero and copysign(x,\*(Pm0).
In particular, comparison (x \*(Gt y, x \*(Ge y, etc.)
cannot be affected by the sign of zero; but if
finite x = y then \*(If \&= 1/(x-y) \*(Ne -1/(y-x) = -\*(If.
.It \*(If is signed.
It persists when added to itself or to any finite number.
Its sign transforms correctly through multiplication and division, and
(finite)/\*(Pm\*(If \0=\0\*(Pm0 (nonzero)/0 = \*(Pm\*(If.
But \*(If-\*(If, \*(If\(**0 and \*(If/\*(If are, like 0/0 and sqrt(-3),
invalid operations that produce \*(Na.
.It Reserved operands:
There are 2**53-2 of them, all
called \*(Na (\fIN\fRot \fIa N\fRumber).
Some, called Signaling \*(Nas, trap any floating-point operation
performed upon them; they are used to mark missing or uninitialized values,
or nonexistent elements of arrays.
The rest are Quiet \*(Nas; they are the default results of Invalid Operations,
and propagate through subsequent arithmetic operations.
If x \*(Ne x then x is \*(Na; every other predicate
(x \*(Gt y, x = y, x \*(Lt y, ...) is FALSE if \*(Na is involved.
.br
.Bl -tag -width "NOTE:" -compact
.It NOTE:
Trichotomy is violated by \*(Na.
Besides being FALSE, predicates that entail ordered
comparison, rather than mere (in)equality,
signal Invalid Operation when \*(Na is involved.
.El
.It Rounding:
Every algebraic operation (+, -, \(**, /,
.if n \
sqrt)
.if t \
\(sr)
is rounded by default to within half a \fIulp\fR, and
when the rounding error is exactly half a \fIulp\fR then
the rounded value's least \*(Si bit is zero.
This kind of rounding is usually the best kind,
sometimes provably so.
For instance, for every
x = 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ..., 2.0**52, we find
(x/3.0)\(**3.0 == x and (x/10.0)\(**10.0 == x and ...
despite that both the quotients and the products
have been rounded.
Only rounding like
.St -ieee754
can do that.
But no single kind of rounding can be
proved best for every circumstance, so
.St -ieee754
provides rounding towards zero or towards +\*(If or
towards -\*(If at the programmer's discretion.
The same kinds of rounding are specified for
Binary-Decimal Conversions, at least for magnitudes
between roughly 1.0e-10 and 1.0e37.
.It Exceptions:
.St -ieee754
recognizes five kinds of floating-point exceptions,
listed below in declining order of probable importance.
.Bl -column -offset indent -compact "Invalid Operation" "Gradual Underflow"
.It Em Exception Ta Em Default Result
.It "Invalid Operation" Ta "\*(Na, or FALSE"
.It "Overflow" Ta "\*(Pm\*(If"
.It "Divide by Zero" Ta "\*(Pm\*(If"
.It "Underflow" Ta "Gradual Underflow"
.It "Inexact" Ta "Rounded value"
.El
NOTE: An Exception is not an Error unless handled
badly.
What makes a class of exceptions exceptional
is that no single default response can be satisfactory
in every instance.
On the other hand, if a default
response will serve most instances satisfactorily,
the unsatisfactory instances cannot justify aborting
computation every time the exception occurs.
.El
.Pp
For each kind of floating-point exception,
.St -ieee754
provides a
.Em flag
that is raised each time its exception
is signaled, and stays raised until the program resets it.
Programs may also test, save and restore a flag.
Thus,
.St -ieee754
provides three ways by which programs may cope with exceptions for
which the default result might be unsatisfactory:
.Bl -tag -width XXX
.It 1)
Test for a condition that might cause an exception
later, and branch to avoid the exception.
.It 2)
Test a flag to see whether an exception has occurred
since the program last reset its flag.
.It 3)
Test a result to see whether it is a value that only
an exception could have produced.
.Pp
CAUTION: The only reliable ways to discover
whether Underflow has occurred are to test whether
products or quotients lie closer to zero than the
underflow threshold, or to test the Underflow
flag.
(Sums and differences cannot underflow in
.St -ieee754 ;
if x \*(Ne y then x-y is correct to
full precision and certainly nonzero regardless of
how tiny it may be.)
Products and quotients that underflow gradually can lose accuracy gradually
without vanishing, so comparing them with zero (as one might on a
.Tn VAX )
will not reveal the loss.
Fortunately, if a gradually underflowed value is
destined to be added to something bigger than the
underflow threshold, as is almost always the case,
digits lost to gradual underflow will not be missed
because they would have been rounded off anyway.
So gradual underflows are usually \fIprovably\fR ignorable.
The same cannot be said of underflows flushed to 0.
.El
.Bl -tag -width XXX
At the option of an implementor conforming to
.St -ieee754 ,
other ways to cope with exceptions may be provided:
.It 4)
ABORT.
This mechanism classifies an exception in
advance as an incident to be handled by means
traditionally associated with error-handling
statements like "ON ERROR GO TO ...".
Different languages offer different forms of this statement,
but most share the following characteristics:
.Bl -dash
.It
No means is provided to substitute a value for
the offending operation's result and resume
computation from what may be the middle of an
expression.
An exceptional result is abandoned.
.It
In a subprogram that lacks an error-handling
statement, an exception causes the subprogram to
abort within whatever program called it, and so
on back up the chain of calling subprograms until
an error-handling statement is encountered or the
whole task is aborted and memory is dumped.
.El
.It 5)
STOP.
This mechanism, requiring an interactive debugging environment, is more
for the programmer than the program.
It classifies an exception in advance as a symptom of a programmer's error;
the exception suspends execution as near as it can to the offending operation
so that the programmer can look around to see how it happened.
Often times the first several exceptions turn out to be quite
unexceptionable, so the programmer ought ideally
to be able to resume execution after each one as if
execution had not been stopped.
.It 6)
\&... Other ways lie beyond the scope of this document.
.El
.Pp
The crucial problem for exception handling is the problem of
Scope, and the problem's solution is understood, but not
enough manpower was available to implement it fully in time
to be distributed in
.Bx 4.3 's
.Em libm .
Ideally, each elementary function should act as if it were indivisible,
or atomic, in the sense that ...
.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset XXXX
.It i)
No exception should be signaled that is not deserved by
the data supplied to that function.
.It ii)
Any exception signaled should be identified with that
function rather than with one of its subroutines.
.It iii)
The internal behavior of an atomic function should not
be disrupted when a calling program changes from
one to another of the five or so ways of handling
exceptions listed above, although the definition
of the function may be correlated intentionally
with exception handling.
.El
.Pp
Ideally, every programmer should be able to
.Em conveniently
turn a debugged subprogram into one that appears atomic to its users.
But simulating all three characteristics of an atomic function is still
a tedious affair, entailing hosts of tests and saves-restores;
work is under way to ameliorate the inconvenience.
.Pp
Meanwhile, the functions in
.Em libm
are only approximately atomic.
They signal no inappropriate exception except possibly:
.Pp
.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
.It Over/Underflow
when a result, if properly computed, might have lain barely within range, and
.It Inexact in \fIcabs\fR, \fIcbrt\fR, \fIhypot\fR, \fIlog10\fR and \fIpow\fR
when it happens to be exact, thanks to fortuitous cancellation of errors.
.El
.Pp
Otherwise:
.Pp
.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
.It Invalid Operation is signaled only when
any result but \*(Na would probably be misleading.
.It Overflow is signaled only when
the exact result would be finite but beyond the overflow threshold.
.It Divide-by-Zero is signaled only when
a function takes exactly infinite values at finite operands.
.It Underflow is signaled only when
the exact result would be nonzero but tinier than the underflow threshold.
.It Inexact is signaled only when
greater range or precision would be needed to represent the exact result.
.El
.Pp
Properties of
.St -ieee754
Single-Precision:
.Bl -tag -width "Precision:" -offset indent -compact
.It Wordsize:
32 bits, 4 bytes.
.It Radix:
Binary.
.It Precision:
24 \*(Si bits, roughly equivalent to 7 \*(Si decimals.
.br
If x and x' are consecutive positive Double-Precision
numbers (they differ by 1 \fIulp\fR, then
.br
.Li 6.0e-8 \*(Lt 0.5**24 \*(Lt (x'-x)/x \*(Le 0.5**23 \*(Lt 1.2e-7.
.It Range:
Overflow threshold = 2.0**128 = 3.4e38.
.br
Underflow threshold = 0.5**126 = 1.2e-38
.br
Overflow goes by default to a signed \*(If.
.br
Underflow is
.Em Gradual ,
rounding to the nearest integer multiple of 0.5**149 = 1.4e-45.
.It Zero is represented ambiguously as +0 or -0.
Its sign transforms correctly through multiplication or
division, and is preserved by addition of zeros
with like signs; but x-x yields +0 for every
finite x.
The only operations that reveal zero's
sign are division by zero and copysign(x,\*(Pm0).
In particular, comparison (x \*(Gt y, x \*(Ge y, etc.)
cannot be affected by the sign of zero; but if
finite x = y then \*(If \&= 1/(x-y) \*(Ne -1/(y-x) = -\*(If.
.It \*(If is signed.
It persists when added to itself or to any finite number.
Its sign transforms correctly through multiplication and division, and
(finite)/\*(Pm\*(If \0=\0\*(Pm0 (nonzero)/0 = \*(Pm\*(If.
But \*(If-\*(If, \*(If\(**0 and \*(If/\*(If are, like 0/0 and sqrt(-3),
invalid operations that produce \*(Na.
.It Reserved operands:
There are 2**24-2 of them, all
called \*(Na (\fIN\fRot \fIa N\fRumber).
Some, called Signaling \*(Nas, trap any floating-point operation
performed upon them; they are used to mark missing or uninitialized values,
or nonexistent elements of arrays.
The rest are Quiet \*(Nas; they are the default results of Invalid Operations,
and propagate through subsequent arithmetic operations.
If x \*(Ne x then x is \*(Na; every other predicate
(x \*(Gt y, x = y, x \*(Lt y, ...) is FALSE if \*(Na is involved.
.br
.Bl -tag -width "NOTE:" -compact
.It NOTE:
Trichotomy is violated by \*(Na.
Besides being FALSE, predicates that entail ordered
comparison, rather than mere (in)equality,
signal Invalid Operation when \*(Na is involved.
.El
.It Rounding:
Every algebraic operation (+, -, \(**, /,
.if n \
sqrt)
.if t \
\(sr)
is rounded by default to within half a \fIulp\fR, and
when the rounding error is exactly half a \fIulp\fR then
the rounded value's least \*(Si bit is zero.
This kind of rounding is usually the best kind,
sometimes provably so.
For instance, for every
x = 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ..., 2.0**52, we find
(x/3.0)\(**3.0 == x and (x/10.0)\(**10.0 == x and ...
despite that both the quotients and the products
have been rounded.
Only rounding like
.St -ieee754
can do that.
But no single kind of rounding can be
proved best for every circumstance, so
.St -ieee754
provides rounding towards zero or towards +\*(If or
towards -\*(If at the programmer's discretion.
The same kinds of rounding are specified for
Binary-Decimal Conversions, at least for magnitudes
between roughly 1.0e-10 and 1.0e37.
.It Exceptions:
.St -ieee754
recognizes five kinds of floating-point exceptions,
listed below in declining order of probable importance.
.Bl -column -offset indent -compact "Invalid Operation" "Gradual Underflow"
.It Em Exception Ta Em Default Result
.It "Invalid Operation" Ta "\*(Na, or FALSE"
.It "Overflow" Ta "\*(Pm\*(If"
.It "Divide by Zero" Ta "\*(Pm\*(If"
.It "Underflow" Ta "Gradual Underflow"
.It "Inexact" Ta "Rounded value"
.El
NOTE: An Exception is not an Error unless handled
badly.
What makes a class of exceptions exceptional
is that no single default response can be satisfactory
in every instance.
On the other hand, if a default
response will serve most instances satisfactorily,
the unsatisfactory instances cannot justify aborting
computation every time the exception occurs.
.El
.Sh SEE ALSO
An explanation of
.St -ieee754
and its proposed extension p854
was published in the
.Tn IEEE
magazine MICRO in August 1984 under
the title "A Proposed Radix- and Word-length-independent
Standard for Floating-point Arithmetic" by W. J. Cody et al.
The manuals for Pascal, C and BASIC on the Apple Macintosh
document the features of
.St -ieee754
pretty well.
Articles in the
.Tn IEEE
magazine COMPUTER vol. 14 no. 3 (Mar. 1981), and in the
.Tn ACM SIGNUM
Newsletter Special Issue of Oct. 1979, may be helpful although they pertain to
superseded drafts of the standard.
.Sh BUGS
When signals are appropriate, they are emitted by certain
operations within
.Em libm ,
so a subroutine-trace may be needed to identify the function with its
signal in case method 5) above is in use.
All the code in
.Em libm
takes the
.St -ieee754
defaults for granted; this means that a decision to
trap all divisions by zero could disrupt a function that would
otherwise get a correct result despite division by zero.