Standard arithmetic functions including things like rounding, sign manipulation, and maximum/minimum functions. Phase folding operations, and a convenient form of the modulus operation on which they are based, are also provided.
roundUp( x )x (floating point): a value.
x rounded up
roundDown( x )x (floating point): a value
x rounded down
round( x )x (floating point): a floating point value.
x rounded to the nearest integer
roundDecimal( x, dp )float (32-bit floating point value),
so this is only suitable for relatively low-precision values.
It's intended for truncating the number of apparent significant
figures represented by a value which you know has been obtained
by combining other values of limited precision.
For more control, see the functions in the Formats class.
x (floating point): a floating point value
dp (integer): number of decimal places (digits after the decimal point)
to retain
x but with a
limited apparent precision
abs( x )x (integer): the argument whose absolute value is to be determined
abs( x )x (floating point): the argument whose absolute value is to be determined
max( a, b )Multiple-argument maximum functions are also provided in the
Arrays and Lists packages.
a (integer): an argument.
b (integer): another argument.
a and b.
maxNaN( a, b )a (floating point): an argument.
b (floating point): another argument.
a and b.
maxReal( a, b )Multiple-argument maximum functions are also provided in the
Arrays and Lists packages.
a (floating point): an argument
b (floating point): another argument
a and bmin( a, b )Multiple-argument minimum functions are also provided in the
Arrays and Lists packages.
a (integer): an argument.
b (integer): another argument.
a and b.
minNaN( a, b )a (floating point): an argument.
b (floating point): another argument.
a and b.
minReal( a, b )Multiple-argument minimum functions are also provided in the
Arrays and Lists packages.
a (floating point): an argument
b (floating point): another argument
a and bmod( a, b )a/b.
This is a modulo operation, but differs from the expression
a%b in that the answer is always >=0
(as long as b is not zero).
a (floating point): dividend
b (floating point): divisor
a by bphase( t, period )For positive period, the returned value is in the range [0,1).
t (floating point): value
period (floating point): folding period
phase( t, period, t0 )t0 corresponds to phase zero.
For positive period, the returned value is in the range [0,1).
t (floating point): value
period (floating point): folding period
t0 (floating point): reference value, corresponding to phase zero
phase( t, period, t0, phase0 )t0 corresponds to integer phase
value, and the phase offset phase0 determines the
starting value for the phase range.
For positive period, the returned value is in the range
[phase0,phase0+1).
t (floating point): value
period (floating point): folding period
t0 (floating point): reference value, corresponding to phase zero
phase0 (floating point): offset for phase