ilogb, ilogbf, ilogbl — return an unbiased exponent
#include <math.h>
int ilogb(double x);
int ilogbf(float x);
int ilogbl(long double x);
[CX] The functionality described on this reference page is aligned with the ISO C standard. Any conflict between the requirements described here and the ISO C standard is unintentional. This volume of POSIX.1-2024 defers to the ISO C standard.These functions shall return the exponent part of their argument x. Formally, the return value is the integral part of \(\log _r|x|\) as a signed integral value, for non-zero x, where r is the radix of the machine's floating-point arithmetic, which is the value of FLT_RADIX defined in <float.h>.
An application wishing to check for error situations should set errno to zero and call feclearexcept(FE_ALL_EXCEPT) before calling these functions. On return, if errno is non-zero or fetestexcept(FE_INVALID | FE_DIVBYZERO | FE_OVERFLOW | FE_UNDERFLOW) is non-zero, an error has occurred.
Upon successful completion, these functions shall return the exponent part of x as a signed integer value. They are equivalent to calling the corresponding logb() function and casting the returned value to type int.
[MX] When the correct result is representable in the range of the return type, the returned value shall be exact and shall be independent of the current rounding direction mode.
If x is 0, the value FP_ILOGB0 shall be returned. [XSI|MX] On XSI-conformant systems and on systems that support the IEC 60559 Floating-Point option, a domain error shall occur; otherwise, a
[CX] domain error may occur.If x is ±Inf, the value {INT_MAX} shall be returned. [XSI|MX] On XSI-conformant systems and on systems that support the IEC 60559 Floating-Point option, a domain error shall occur; otherwise, a [CX] domain error may occur.
If x is a NaN, the value FP_ILOGBNAN shall be returned. [XSI|MX] On XSI-conformant systems and on systems that support the IEC 60559 Floating-Point option, a domain error shall occur; otherwise, a [CX] domain error may occur.
If the correct value is greater than {INT_MAX} or less than {INT_MIN}, an unspecified value shall be returned. [XSI] On XSI-conformant systems, a domain error shall occur and {INT_MAX} or {INT_MIN}, respectively, shall be returned;
[MX] if the IEC 60559 Floating-Point option is supported, a domain error shall occur; otherwise, a domain error or range error may occur.
These functions shall fail if:
- Domain Error
- [XSI|MX] The correct value is not representable as an integer.
The x argument is zero, NaN, or ±Inf.
If the integer expression (math_errhandling & MATH_ERRNO) is non-zero, then errno shall be set to [EDOM]. If the integer expression (math_errhandling & MATH_ERREXCEPT) is non-zero, then the invalid floating-point exception shall be raised.
These functions may fail if:
- Domain Error
- The x argument is zero, NaN, or ±Inf.
If the integer expression (math_errhandling & MATH_ERRNO) is non-zero, then errno shall be set to [EDOM]. If the integer expression (math_errhandling & MATH_ERREXCEPT) is non-zero, then the invalid floating-point exception shall be raised.
None.
On error, the expressions (math_errhandling & MATH_ERRNO) and (math_errhandling & MATH_ERREXCEPT) are independent of each other, but at least one of them must be non-zero.
The errors come from taking the expected floating-point value and converting it to int, which is an invalid operation in IEEE Std 754-1985 (since overflow, infinity, and NaN are not representable in a type int), so should be a domain error.
There are no known implementations that overflow. For overflow to happen, {INT_MAX} must be less than LDBL_MAX_EXP*log2(FLT_RADIX) or {INT_MIN} must be greater than LDBL_MIN_EXP*log2(FLT_RADIX) if subnormals are not supported, or {INT_MIN} must be greater than (LDBL_MIN_EXP-LDBL_MANT_DIG)*log2(FLT_RADIX) if subnormals are supported.
None.
feclearexcept , fetestexcept , logb , scalbln
XBD 4.23 Treatment of Error Conditions for Mathematical Functions , <float.h> , <math.h>
First released in Issue 4, Version 2.
Moved from X/OPEN UNIX extension to BASE.
The ilogb() function is no longer marked as an extension.
The ilogbf() and ilogbl() functions are added for alignment with the ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard.
The RETURN VALUE section is revised for alignment with the ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard.
Functionality relating to the XSI option is marked.
ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard, Technical Corrigendum 2 #48 (SD5-XSH-ERN-71), #49, and #79 (SD5-XSH-ERN-72) are applied.
Austin Group Defect 1302 is applied, aligning these functions with the ISO/IEC 9899:2018 standard.
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