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<fenv.h>

[Added with C99]


FE_ALL_EXCEPT · FE_DFL_ENV · FE_DIVBYZERO · FE_DOWNWARD · FE_INEXACT · FE_INVALID · FE_OVERFLOW · FE_TONEAREST · FE_TOWARDZERO · FE_UNDERFLOW · FE_UPWARD

FENV_ACCESS

feclearexcept · fegetenv · fegetexceptflag · fegetround · feholdexcept · fenv_t · feraiseexcept · fesetenv · fesetexceptflag · fesetround · fetestexcept · feupdateenv · fexcept_t

fegettrapenable · fesettrapenable


Include the standard header <fenv.h> to define two types, several macros, and several functions that test and control floating-point status, if the implementation permits. The functionality matches IEC 60559, but it can be applied to similar floating-point hardware. Floating-point status can be represented in an object of type fexcept_t. It forms part of the floating-point control, which determines the behavior of floating-point arithmetic. A copy of the floating-point control can be represented in an object of type fenv_t.

Another part of the floating-point control is the rounding mode, representable as a value of type int, which determines how floating-point values convert to integers. The rounding modes are:

An implementation may define additional rounding modes.

By convention, a C function does not alter the floating-point control, nor assume other than the default settings for the floating-point control, without explicitly documenting the fact. Any C function can change the floating-point status by reporting one of several floating-point exceptions:

An implementation may define additional floating-point exceptions.

Reporting an exception sets a corresponding indicator in the floating-point status. It can also raise a floating-point exception, which can result in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal.

The pragma:

#pragma STD FENV_ACCESS [ON|OFF|DEFAULT]

informs the translator whether the program intends to control and test floating-point status. If the parameter is ON, the program may use the functions declared in this header to control and test floating-point status. If the parameter is OFF, the use of these functions is disallowed. The parameter DEFAULT restores the original state, which is implementation defined. If the pragma occurs outside an external declaration, it remains in effect until overridden by another such pragma. If the pragma occurs inside an external declaration, it must precede all explicit declarations and statements within a compound statement. It remains in effect until overridden by another such pragma or until the end of the compound statement. On a transition from OFF to ON, floating-point status flags are unspecified and the floating-point control is in its default state.

    /* MACROS */
#define FE_DIVBYZERO <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_INEXACT <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_INVALID <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_OVERFLOW <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_UNDERFLOW <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_ALL_EXCEPT <integer constant expression> [optional]

#define FE_DOWNWARD <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_TONEAREST <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_TOWARDZERO <integer constant expression> [optional]
#define FE_UPWARD <integer constant expression> [optional]

#define FE_DFL_ENV <const *fenv_t rvalue>

    /* TYPES */
typedef o-type fenv_t;
typedef i-type fexcept_t;

    /* FUNCTIONS */
int feclearexcept(int except);
int fegetexceptflag(fexcept_t *pflag, int except);
int feraiseexcept(int except);
int fesetexceptflag(const fexcept_t *pflag, int except);
int fetestexcept(int except);

int fegetround(void);
int fesetround(int mode);

int fegetenv(fenv_t *penv);
int feholdexcept(fenv_t *penv);
int fesetenv(const fenv_t *penv);
int feupdateenv(const fenv_t *penv);

fexcept_t fegettrapenable(void); [non-standard]
int fesettrapenable(fexcept_t enables); [non-standard]

FE_ALL_EXCEPT

#define FE_ALL_EXCEPT <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for one or more floating-point exceptions. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_DFL_ENV

#define FE_DFL_ENV <const *fenv_t rvalue>

The macro expands to a pointer to an object that describes the settings for the floating-point control at program startup.

FE_DIVBYZERO

#define FE_DIVBYZERO <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for a zero-divide floating-point exception. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_DOWNWARD

#define FE_DOWNWARD <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value accepted as an argument to fesetround and returned by fegetround to indicate the downward rounding mode. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control the rounding mode.

FE_INEXACT

#define FE_INEXACT <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for an inexact floating-point exception. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_INVALID

#define FE_INVALID <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for an invalid floating-point exception. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_TONEAREST

#define FE_TONEAREST <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value accepted as an argument to fesetround and returned by fegetround to indicate the to nearest rounding mode. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control the rounding mode.

FE_TOWARDZERO

#define FE_TOWARDZERO <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value accepted as an argument to fesetround and returned by fegetround to indicate the toward zero rounding mode. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control the rounding mode.

FE_OVERFLOW

#define FE_OVERFLOW <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for an overflow floating-point exception. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_UNDERFLOW

#define FE_UNDERFLOW <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value that, when ANDed with a value of type fexcept_t, yields a nonzero value only if the indicator is set for an underflow floating-point exception. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control floating-point exceptions.

FE_UPWARD

#define FE_UPWARD <integer constant expression> [optional]

The macro expands to an integer value accepted as an argument to fesetround and returned by fegetround to indicate the upward rounding mode. The macro is not defined if the functions declared in this header cannot control the rounding mode.

fenv_t

typedef o-type fenv_t;

The type is an object type o-type that can represent the settings stored in the floating-point control.

feclearexcept

int feclearexcept(int except);

The function attempts to clear the exceptions selected by except in the floating-point status portion of the floating-point control. It returns zero only if except is zero or all the exceptions selected by except are successfully cleared.

fegettrapenable

fexcept_t fegettrapenable(void); [non-standard]

The function returns the current floating-point enable mask from the floating-point control, or (fexcept_t)(-1) if it cannot be determined. For an exception selected by except (such as FE_OVERFLOW), an operation that raises the exception results in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal only if fegettrapenable() & except is nonzero. At program startup, fegettrapenable() returns zero.

fegetenv

int fegetenv(fenv_t *penv);

The function attempts to store the settings in the floating-point control at *penv. It returns zero only if the store succeeds.

fegetexceptflag

int fegetexceptflag(fexcept_t *pflag, int except);

The function attempts to store in *pflag a representation of the exceptions selected by except from the floating-point status portion of the floating-point control. It returns zero only if except is zero or all the exceptions selected by except are successfully stored.

fegetround

int fegetround(void);

The function returns the current rounding mode from the floating-point control, or a negative value if it cannot be determined.

feholdexcept

int feholdexcept(fenv_t *penv);

The function stores the settings in the floating-point control at *penv. It also clears all exceptions in the floating-point status portion of the floating-point control and endeavors to establish settings that will not raise any exceptions. (The effect is equivalent to calling fegetenv(penv) followed by feclearexcept(FE_ALL_EXCEPT) and fesettrapenable(0).) The function returns zero only if it succeeds in establishing such settings.

You can use this function in conjunction with feupdateenv to defer the raising of exceptions until spurious ones are cleared, as in:

fenv_t env;
feholdexcept(&env);           // save environment
<evaluate expressions>  // may accumulate exceptions
feclearexcept(FE_INEXACT);    // clear unwanted exception
feupdateenv(&env);            // raise any remaining exceptions

feraiseexcept

int feraiseexcept(int except);

The function attempts to raise the floating-point exceptions specified by except. Whether it raises an inexact floating-point exception after an overflow floating-point exception or an underflow floating-point exception is implementation defined. It returns zero only if except is zero or all the exceptions selected by except are successfully raised.

fesettrapenable

int fesettrapenable(fexcept_t enables); [non-standard]

The function sets the current floating-point enable mask from enables. An invalid value of enables leaves the floating-point enable mask unchanged. The function returns zero only if the floating-point enable mask is successfully set to enables.

If fetestexcept(enables) is nonzero, it is unspecified whether fesettrapenable(enables) results in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal.

fesetenv

int fesetenv(const fenv_t *penv);

The function attempts to restore the settings in the floating-point control from *penv. It returns zero only if the settings are successfully restored.

The settings must be determined by &FE_DFL_ENV or by an earlier call to fegetenv or feholdexcept. Otherwise, if fetestexcept( fegettrapenable()) would be nonzero for the restored settings, it is unspecified whether the function evaluation results in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal.

fesetexceptflag

int fesetexceptflag(const fexcept_t *pflag, int except);

The function attempts to set the exceptions selected by except & *pflag in the floating-point status portion of the floating-point control. It returns zero only if except is zero or all the exceptions selected by except & *pflag are successfully set.

The value stored in *pflag must be determined by an earlier call to fegetexceptflag, without an intervening call to fesettrapenable. Otherwise, if fegettrapenable() & except & *pflag is nonzero, it is unspecified whether the function evaluation results in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal.

fesetround

int fesetround(int mode);

The function sets the current rounding mode from mode in the floating-point control. An invalid value of mode leaves the rounding mode unchanged. The function returns zero only if the rounding mode is successfully set to mode.

fetestexcept

int fetestexcept(int except);

The function returns a nonzero value only if one or more of the exceptions selected by except are set in the floating-point status portion of the floating-point control.

feupdateenv

void feupdateenv(const fenv_t *penv);

The function effectively executes:

int except = fetestexcept(FE_ALL_EXCEPT);

fesetenv(penv);
feraiseexcept(except);

Thus, it restores the settings in the floating-point control from *penv, after first saving the exceptions selected by the current floating-point status stored in the floating-point control. The function then raises the saved exceptions. It returns zero only if the settings are successfully restored.

The restored settings must be determined by &FE_DFL_ENV or by an earlier call to fegetenv or feholdexcept. Otherwise, it is unspecified whether the call fesetenv(penv) results in a hardware trap and/or the raising of a signal.

fexcept_t

typedef i-type fexcept_t;

The type is an integer type i-type that can represent the floating-point status.


See also the Table of Contents and the Index.

Copyright © 2000-2002 by P.J. Plauger. All rights reserved.

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