TANH(3) BSD Library Functions Manual TANH(3)NAME
tanh, tanhf, tanhl -- hyperbolic tangent functions
LIBRARY
Math Library (libm, -lm)
SYNOPSIS
#include <math.h>
double
tanh(double x);
float
tanhf(float x);
long double
tanhl(long double x);
DESCRIPTION
The tanh(), tanhf(), and tanhl() functions compute the hyperbolic tangent of x. For a discussion of error due to roundoff, see math(3).
RETURN VALUES
The tanh(), tanhf(), and the tanhl() functions return the hyperbolic tangent value.
SEE ALSO acos(3), asin(3), atan(3), atan2(3), cos(3), cosh(3), ctanh(3), math(3), sin(3), sinh(3), tan(3)STANDARDS
The tanh() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90'').
BSD August 17, 2013 BSD
Check Out this Related Man Page
TANH(3) Linux Programmer's Manual TANH(3)NAME
tanh, tanhf, tanhl - hyperbolic tangent function
SYNOPSIS
#include <math.h>
double tanh(double x);
float tanhf(float x);
long double tanhl(long double x);
Link with -lm.
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
tanhf(), tanhl(): _BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE || _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600 || _ISOC99_SOURCE; or cc -std=c99
DESCRIPTION
The tanh() function returns the hyperbolic tangent of x, which is defined mathematically as:
tanh(x) = sinh(x) / cosh(x)
RETURN VALUE
On success, these functions return the hyperbolic tangent of x.
If x is a NaN, a NaN is returned.
If x is +0 (-0), +0 (-0) is returned.
If x is positive infinity (negative infinity), +1 (-1) is returned.
ERRORS
No errors occur.
CONFORMING TO
C99, POSIX.1-2001. The variant returning double also conforms to SVr4, 4.3BSD, C89.
SEE ALSO acosh(3), asinh(3), atanh(3), cosh(3), ctanh(3), sinh(3)COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 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/.
2008-08-05 TANH(3)
Introduction
Originally, we only had one shell on unix. When ran a command, the shell would attempt to invoke one of the exec() system calls on it. It the command was an executable, the exec would succeed and the command would run. If the exec() failed, the shell would not give up, instead it... (3 Replies)
FreeBSD Kernel Internals, Dr. Marshall Kirk McKusick
nwbqBdghh6E
The first hour of Marshall Kirk McKusick's course on FreeBSD kernel internals based on his book, The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System. (0 Replies)
Introduction
I have seen some misinformation regarding Unix file permissions. I will try to set the record straight. Take a look at this example of some output from ls:
$ ls -ld /usr/bin /usr/bin/cat
drwxrwxr-x 3 root bin 8704 Sep 23 2004 /usr/bin
-r-xr-xr-x 1 bin bin ... (6 Replies)
Suppose I have a main() function with only one malloc statement allocating say some 1 gb memory. Also say my system has 1 gb of ram.
main()
{
malloc(1gb)
return(0)
}
The program above exits without freeing the memory.
In this case will the 1 gb of heap memory be returned... (9 Replies)
I see lot of ad-hoc shell scripts in our servers which don't have a shebang at the beginning .
Does this mean that it will run on any shell ?
Is it a good practice to create scripts (even ad-hoc ones) without shebang ? (16 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I know the following questions are noobish questions but I am asking them because I am confused about the basics of history behind UNIX and LINUX.
Ok onto business, my questions are-:
Was/Is UNIX ever an open source operating system ?
If UNIX was... (21 Replies)
A shout out to Scott who gave me a helping hand to turn a simple sample Vue.js app I wrote yesterday into a Vue.js component:
Vue.component("unix-time", {
template: `<div class="time">{{unixtime}}</div>`,
data() {
return {
unixtime: ""
};
},
methods: {
... (1 Reply)
i read here that linux provides no way to determine when a directory was created.
https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-and-scripting/157874-creation-date-directory.htmlI have a directory /home/andy/scripts that had a README file in it.
That file says
I put the script in that directory and... (3 Replies)
Hello.
I can use any particular (stupid or not) format when using bash date command.
Example :
~> date --date "now" '+%Y-%m-%d %H!%M!%S'
2019-06-03 12!55!33or
~> date --date "now" '+%Y£%m£%d %H¤%M¤%S'
2019£06£03 12¤57¤36
or
~> date --date "now" '+%Y-%m-%d %H-%M-%S'
2019-06-03 12-58-51
... (4 Replies)
Morning All
So, I am starting looking into the world of UNIX for a new job (luckily not my primary function!) and I am looking to get stared. Like anything I seem to learn best by trying things out first in an environment but I have a key question:
Currently I use Oracle VirtualBox, can... (8 Replies)
I've installed Slack 14.2 on /dev/sda1 (/dev/sda2 is swap) and FreeBSD 12 on /dev/sda3 and lilo is the boot manager.
FreeBSD slices are as follows;
/ on /dev/ada0S3a, swap on /dev/ada0s3e, /var on /dev/ada0s3b, /tmp on /dev/ada0s3d and /usr on /dev/ada0s3f.
I hesitate to install Solaris 10... (2 Replies)
I'm trying to use a bash script for a psych experiment that involves listening to sound files and responding. If I have something like the code below, how can I make sure that a key press is assigned to RESPONSE only after the second echo statement?
for i in 1 2 3; do
echo "Ready?"
sleep 2
... (10 Replies)