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Diffstat (limited to 'manual/arith.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/arith.texi111
1 files changed, 87 insertions, 24 deletions
diff --git a/manual/arith.texi b/manual/arith.texi
index 59ddbd626f..d8703ea6c1 100644
--- a/manual/arith.texi
+++ b/manual/arith.texi
@@ -411,7 +411,36 @@ type @code{long int} rather than @code{int}.)
@deftypefun ldiv_t ldiv (long int @var{numerator}, long int @var{denominator})
The @code{ldiv} function is similar to @code{div}, except that the
arguments are of type @code{long int} and the result is returned as a
-structure of type @code{ldiv}.
+structure of type @code{ldiv_t}.
+@end deftypefun
+
+@comment stdlib.h
+@comment GNU
+@deftp {Data Type} lldiv_t
+This is a structure type used to hold the result returned by the @code{lldiv}
+function. It has the following members:
+
+@table @code
+@item long long int quot
+The quotient from the division.
+
+@item long long int rem
+The remainder from the division.
+@end table
+
+(This is identical to @code{div_t} except that the components are of
+type @code{long long int} rather than @code{int}.)
+@end deftp
+
+@comment stdlib.h
+@comment GNU
+@deftypefun lldiv_t lldiv (long long int @var{numerator}, long long int @var{denominator})
+The @code{lldiv} function is like the @code{div} function, but the
+arguments are of type @code{long long int} and the result is returned as
+a structure of type @code{lldiv_t}.
+
+The @code{lldiv} function is a GNU extension but it will eventually be
+part of the next ISO C standard.
@end deftypefun
@@ -519,42 +548,48 @@ to @code{EINVAL} and returns @code{0ul}.
@end deftypefun
@comment stdlib.h
-@comment BSD
-@deftypefun {long long int} strtoq (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
-The @code{strtoq} (``string-to-quad-word'') function is like
-@code{strtol} except that is deals with extra long numbers and it
-returns its value with type @code{long long int}.
+@comment GNU
+@deftypefun {long long int} strtoll (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
+The @code{strtoll} function is like @code{strtol} except that is deals
+with extra long numbers and it returns its value with type @code{long
+long int}.
If the string has valid syntax for an integer but the value is not
-representable because of overflow, @code{strtoq} returns either
+representable because of overflow, @code{strtoll} returns either
@code{LONG_LONG_MAX} or @code{LONG_LONG_MIN} (@pxref{Range of Type}), as
appropriate for the sign of the value. It also sets @code{errno} to
@code{ERANGE} to indicate there was overflow.
-@end deftypefun
-@comment stdlib.h
-@comment GNU
-@deftypefun {long long int} strtoll (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
-@code{strtoll} is only an commonly used other name for the @code{strtoq}
-function. Everything said for @code{strtoq} applies to @code{strtoll}
-as well.
+The @code{strtoll} function is a GNU extension but it will eventually be
+part of the next ISO C standard.
@end deftypefun
@comment stdlib.h
@comment BSD
-@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} strtouq (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
-The @code{strtouq} (``string-to-unsigned-quad-word'') function is like
-@code{strtoul} except that is deals with extra long numbers and it
-returns its value with type @code{unsigned long long int}. The value
-returned in case of overflow is @code{ULONG_LONG_MAX} (@pxref{Range of Type}).
+@deftypefun {long long int} strtoq (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
+@code{strtoq} (``string-to-quad-word'') is only an commonly used other
+name for the @code{strtoll} function. Everything said for
+@code{strtoll} applies to @code{strtoq} as well.
@end deftypefun
@comment stdlib.h
@comment GNU
@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} strtoull (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
-@code{strtoull} is only an commonly used other name for the @code{strtouq}
-function. Everything said for @code{strtouq} applies to @code{strtoull}
-as well.
+The @code{strtoull} function is like @code{strtoul} except that is deals
+with extra long numbers and it returns its value with type
+@code{unsigned long long int}. The value returned in case of overflow
+is @code{ULONG_LONG_MAX} (@pxref{Range of Type}).
+
+The @code{strtoull} function is a GNU extension but it will eventually be
+part of the next ISO C standard.
+@end deftypefun
+
+@comment stdlib.h
+@comment BSD
+@deftypefun {unsigned long long int} strtouq (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{tailptr}, int @var{base})
+@code{strtouq} (``string-to-unsigned-quad-word'') is only an commonly
+used other name for the @code{strtoull} function. Everything said for
+@code{strtoull} applies to @code{strtouq} as well.
@end deftypefun
@comment stdlib.h
@@ -574,6 +609,16 @@ value rather than @code{long int}. The @code{atoi} function is also
considered obsolete; use @code{strtol} instead.
@end deftypefun
+@comment stdlib.h
+@comment GNU
+@deftypefun {long long int} atoll (const char *@var{string})
+This function is similar to @code{atol}, except it returns a @code{long
+long int} value rather than @code{long int}.
+
+The @code{atoll} function is a GNU extension but it will eventually be
+part of the next ISO C standard.
+@end deftypefun
+
The POSIX locales contain some information about how to format numbers
(@pxref{General Numeric}). This mainly deals with representing numbers
for better readability for humans. The functions present so far in this
@@ -688,6 +733,24 @@ the sign of the value. Similarly, if the value is not representable
because of underflow, @code{strtod} returns zero. It also sets @code{errno}
to @code{ERANGE} if there was overflow or underflow.
+There are two more special inputs which are recognized by @code{strtod}.
+The string @code{"inf"} or @code{"infinity"} (without consideration of
+case and optionally preceded by a @code{"+"} or @code{"-"} sign) is
+changed to the floating-point value for infinity if the floating-point
+format supports this; and to the largest representable value otherwise.
+
+If the input string is @code{"nan"} or
+@code{"nan(@var{n-char-sequence})"} the return value of @code{strtod} is
+the representation of the NaN (not a number) value (if the
+flaoting-point formats supports this. The form with the
+@var{n-char-sequence} enables in an implementation specific way to
+specify the form of the NaN value. When using the @w{IEEE 754}
+floating-point format, the NaN value can have a lot of forms since only
+at least one bit in the mantissa must be set. In the GNU C library
+implementation of @code{strtod} the @var{n-char-sequence} is interpreted
+as a number (as recognized by @code{strtol}, @pxref{Parsing of Integers})
+The mantissa of the return value corresponds to this given number.
+
Since the value zero which is returned in the error case is also a valid
result the user should set the global variable @code{errno} to zero
before calling this function. So one can test for failures after the
@@ -707,7 +770,7 @@ precision can require additional computation.
If the string has valid syntax for a floating-point number but the value
is not representable because of overflow, @code{strtof} returns either
-positive or negative @code{HUGE_VALf} (@pxref{Mathematics}), depending on
+positive or negative @code{HUGE_VALF} (@pxref{Mathematics}), depending on
the sign of the value.
This function is a GNU extension.
@@ -725,7 +788,7 @@ of precision are required.
If the string has valid syntax for a floating-point number but the value
is not representable because of overflow, @code{strtold} returns either
-positive or negative @code{HUGE_VALl} (@pxref{Mathematics}), depending on
+positive or negative @code{HUGE_VALL} (@pxref{Mathematics}), depending on
the sign of the value.
This function is a GNU extension.