|
ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages
|
|
This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles. For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5). |
TGAMMA(3) BSD Library Functions Manual TGAMMA(3)
NAME
tgamma, lgamma, gamma -- gamma and log of gamma
SYNOPSIS
#include <math.h>
double
tgamma(double x);
long double
tgammal(long double x);
float
tgammaf(float x);
double
lgamma(double x);
long double
lgammal(long double x);
float
lgammaf(float x);
double
gamma(double x);
DESCRIPTION
tgamma() calculates the gamma function of x. lgamma() calculates the
natural logorithm of the absolute value of the gamma function of x.
gamma() is the same function as tgamma. Its use is deprecated.
SPECIAL VALUES
tgamma(+-0) returns +-infinity and raises the "divide-by-zero" floating-point floatingpoint
point exception.
tgamma(x) returns a NaN and raises the "invalid" floating-point exception
if x is a negative integer.
tgamma(-infinity) returns a NaN and raises the "invalid" floating-point
exception.
tgamma(+infinity) returns +infinity.
tgamma(x) generates a domain error if x is a negative integer or if the
result cannnot be respresented when x is 0.
A range error may occur if the magnitude of x is too large or too small.
gamma() has the same behavior as tgamma().
lgamma(1) returns +0.
lgamma(2) returns +0.
lgamma(x) returns +infinity and raises the "divide-by-zero" floating-point floatingpoint
point exception if x is a negative integer or 0.
lgamma(+-infinity) returns +infinity.
lgamma(x) generates a range error if x is too large.
A range error may occur if x is a negative integer or 0.
NOTE
lgamma(x) and its variants have the (non-threadsafe) side-effect of set-ting setting
ting the global variable signgam to +-1, equal to the sign of tgamma(x).
SEE ALSO
math(3)
STANDARDS
The tgamma() , and lgamma() functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999(E).
Oct 9, 2006
|