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NAME

ilogb() — returns an unbiased exponent

SYNOPSIS

#include <math.h>

int ilogb(double x);

DESCRIPTION

The ilogb() function returns the exponent part of x. Formally, the return value is the integral part of log base r of |x| as a signed integral value, for nonzero x, where r is the radix of the machine's floating point arithmetic. The argument x is a double-precision floating-point value.

Note: ilogb(x) is equivalent to (int)logb(x) for all values of x except NaN, ±INFINITY, and zero.

The ISO/ANSI C committee has approved the ilogb() function for inclusion in the C9X draft standard.

To use this function, compile either with the default -Ae option or with the -Aa and -D_HPUX_SOURCE options. Make sure your program includes <math.h>. Link in the math library by specifying -lm on the compiler or linker command line.

RETURN VALUE

If x is NaN, ilogb() returns INT_MIN.

If x is ±INFINITY, ilogb() returns INT_MAX.

If x is zero, ilogb() returns INT_MIN.

ERRORS

No errors are defined.

STANDARDS CONFORMANCE

ilogb(): XPG4.2

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