math
— Mathematical functions¶
This module is always available. It provides access to the mathematical functions defined by the C standard.
These functions cannot be used with complex numbers; use the functions of the
same name from the cmath
module if you require support for complex
numbers. The distinction between functions which support complex numbers and
those which don’t is made since most users do not want to learn quite as much
mathematics as required to understand complex numbers. Receiving an exception
instead of a complex result allows earlier detection of the unexpected complex
number used as a parameter, so that the programmer can determine how and why it
was generated in the first place.
The following functions are provided by this module. Except when explicitly noted otherwise, all return values are floats.
Number-theoretic and representation functions¶
-
math.
ceil
(x)¶ Return the ceiling of x, the smallest integer greater than or equal to x. If x is not a float, delegates to
x.__ceil__()
, which should return anIntegral
value.
-
math.
copysign
(x, y)¶ Return x with the sign of y.
copysign
copies the sign bit of an IEEE 754 float,copysign(1, -0.0)
returns -1.0.
-
math.
fabs
(x)¶ Return the absolute value of x.
-
math.
factorial
(x)¶ Return x factorial. Raises
ValueError
if x is not integral or is negative.
-
math.
floor
(x)¶ Return the floor of x, the largest integer less than or equal to x. If x is not a float, delegates to
x.__floor__()
, which should return anIntegral
value.
-
math.
fmod
(x, y)¶ Return
fmod(x, y)
, as defined by the platform C library. Note that the Python expressionx % y
may not return the same result. The intent of the C standard is thatfmod(x, y)
be exactly (mathematically; to infinite precision) equal tox - n*y
for some integer n such that the result has the same sign as x and magnitude less thanabs(y)
. Python’sx % y
returns a result with the sign of y instead, and may not be exactly computable for float arguments. For example,fmod(-1e-100, 1e100)
is-1e-100
, but the result of Python’s-1e-100 % 1e100
is1e100-1e-100
, which cannot be represented exactly as a float, and rounds to the surprising1e100
. For this reason, functionfmod()
is generally preferred when working with floats, while Python’sx % y
is preferred when working with integers.
-
math.
frexp
(x)¶ Return the mantissa and exponent of x as the pair
(m, e)
. m is a float and e is an integer such thatx == m * 2**e
exactly. If x is zero, returns(0.0, 0)
, otherwise0.5 <= abs(m) < 1
. This is used to 「pick apart」 the internal representation of a float in a portable way.
-
math.
fsum
(iterable)¶ Return an accurate floating point sum of values in the iterable. Avoids loss of precision by tracking multiple intermediate partial sums. The algorithm’s accuracy depends on IEEE-754 arithmetic guarantees and the typical case where the rounding mode is half-even.
備註
The accuracy of fsum() may be impaired on builds that use extended precision addition and then double-round the results.
-
math.
isinf
(x)¶ Checks if the float x is positive or negative infinite.
-
math.
isnan
(x)¶ Checks if the float x is a NaN (not a number). NaNs are part of the IEEE 754 standards. Operation like but not limited to
inf * 0
,inf / inf
or any operation involving a NaN, e.g.nan * 1
, return a NaN.
-
math.
modf
(x)¶ Return the fractional and integer parts of x. Both results carry the sign of x and are floats.
-
math.
trunc
(x)¶ Return the
Real
value x truncated to anIntegral
(usually an integer). Delegates tox.__trunc__()
.
Note that frexp()
and modf()
have a different call/return pattern
than their C equivalents: they take a single argument and return a pair of
values, rather than returning their second return value through an 『output
parameter』 (there is no such thing in Python).
For the ceil()
, floor()
, and modf()
functions, note that all
floating-point numbers of sufficiently large magnitude are exact integers.
Python floats typically carry no more than 53 bits of precision (the same as the
platform C double type), in which case any float x with abs(x) >= 2**52
necessarily has no fractional bits.
Power and logarithmic functions¶
-
math.
exp
(x)¶ Return
e**x
.
-
math.
log
(x[, base])¶ Return the logarithm of x to the given base. If the base is not specified, return the natural logarithm of x (that is, the logarithm to base e).
-
math.
log1p
(x)¶ Return the natural logarithm of 1+x (base e). The result is calculated in a way which is accurate for x near zero.
-
math.
log10
(x)¶ Return the base-10 logarithm of x.
-
math.
pow
(x, y)¶ Return
x
raised to the powery
. Exceptional cases follow Annex 『F』 of the C99 standard as far as possible. In particular,pow(1.0, x)
andpow(x, 0.0)
always return1.0
, even whenx
is a zero or a NaN. If bothx
andy
are finite,x
is negative, andy
is not an integer thenpow(x, y)
is undefined, and raisesValueError
.
-
math.
sqrt
(x)¶ Return the square root of x.
Trigonometric functions¶
-
math.
acos
(x)¶ Return the arc cosine of x, in radians.
-
math.
asin
(x)¶ Return the arc sine of x, in radians.
-
math.
atan
(x)¶ Return the arc tangent of x, in radians.
-
math.
atan2
(y, x)¶ Return
atan(y / x)
, in radians. The result is between-pi
andpi
. The vector in the plane from the origin to point(x, y)
makes this angle with the positive X axis. The point ofatan2()
is that the signs of both inputs are known to it, so it can compute the correct quadrant for the angle. For example,atan(1
) andatan2(1, 1)
are bothpi/4
, butatan2(-1, -1)
is-3*pi/4
.
-
math.
cos
(x)¶ Return the cosine of x radians.
-
math.
hypot
(x, y)¶ Return the Euclidean norm,
sqrt(x*x + y*y)
. This is the length of the vector from the origin to point(x, y)
.
-
math.
sin
(x)¶ Return the sine of x radians.
-
math.
tan
(x)¶ Return the tangent of x radians.
Angular conversion¶
-
math.
degrees
(x)¶ Converts angle x from radians to degrees.
-
math.
radians
(x)¶ Converts angle x from degrees to radians.
Hyperbolic functions¶
-
math.
acosh
(x)¶ Return the inverse hyperbolic cosine of x.
-
math.
asinh
(x)¶ Return the inverse hyperbolic sine of x.
-
math.
atanh
(x)¶ Return the inverse hyperbolic tangent of x.
-
math.
cosh
(x)¶ Return the hyperbolic cosine of x.
-
math.
sinh
(x)¶ Return the hyperbolic sine of x.
-
math.
tanh
(x)¶ Return the hyperbolic tangent of x.
Constants¶
-
math.
pi
¶ The mathematical constant pi.
-
math.
e
¶ The mathematical constant e.
備註
The math
module consists mostly of thin wrappers around the platform C
math library functions. Behavior in exceptional cases is loosely specified
by the C standards, and Python inherits much of its math-function
error-reporting behavior from the platform C implementation. As a result,
the specific exceptions raised in error cases (and even whether some
arguments are considered to be exceptional at all) are not defined in any
useful cross-platform or cross-release way. For example, whether
math.log(0)
returns -Inf
or raises ValueError
or
OverflowError
isn’t defined, and in cases where math.log(0)
raises
OverflowError
, math.log(0L)
may raise ValueError
instead.
All functions return a quiet NaN if at least one of the args is NaN.
Signaling NaNs raise an exception. The exception type still depends on the
platform and libm implementation. It’s usually ValueError
for EDOM
and OverflowError
for errno ERANGE.
也參考
- Module
cmath
- Complex number versions of many of these functions.