AI-generated Key Takeaways
- 
          The StrictMathclass in Java provides a set of mathematical functions ensuring consistent and portable results across platforms.
- 
          It includes trigonometric, logarithmic, exponential, rounding, and other essential mathematical operations. 
- 
          StrictMathuses thefdlibmlibrary for specific functions to guarantee accuracy and portability.
- 
          Methods like addExactare used for overflow detection, ensuring reliability in calculations.
- 
          It supports operations on int,long,float, anddoubledata types.
The class StrictMath contains methods for performing basic
 numeric operations such as the elementary exponential, logarithm,
 square root, and trigonometric functions.
 
To help ensure portability of Java programs, the definitions of
 some of the numeric functions in this package require that they
 produce the same results as certain published algorithms. These
 algorithms are available from the well-known network library
 netlib as the package "Freely Distributable Math
 Library," fdlibm. These
 algorithms, which are written in the C programming language, are
 then to be understood as executed with all floating-point
 operations following the rules of Java floating-point arithmetic.
 
The Java math library is defined with respect to
 fdlibm version 5.3. Where fdlibm provides
 more than one definition for a function (such as
 acos), use the "IEEE 754 core function" version
 (residing in a file whose name begins with the letter
 e).  The methods which require fdlibm
 semantics are sin, cos, tan,
 asin, acos, atan,
 exp, log, log10,
 cbrt, atan2, pow,
 sinh, cosh, tanh,
 hypot, expm1, and log1p.
 
 The platform uses signed two's complement integer arithmetic with
 int and long primitive types.  The developer should choose
 the primitive type to ensure that arithmetic operations consistently
 produce correct results, which in some cases means the operations
 will not overflow the range of values of the computation.
 The best practice is to choose the primitive type and algorithm to avoid
 overflow. In cases where the size is int or long and
 overflow errors need to be detected, the methods addExact,
 subtractExact, multiplyExact, and toIntExact
 throw an ArithmeticException when the results overflow.
 For other arithmetic operations such as divide, absolute value,
 increment, decrement, and negation overflow occurs only with
 a specific minimum or maximum value and should be checked against
 the minimum or maximum as appropriate.
Constant Summary
| double | E | The doublevalue that is closer than any other to
 e, the base of the natural logarithms. | 
| double | PI | The doublevalue that is closer than any other to
 pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its
 diameter. | 
Public Method Summary
| static double | 
                IEEEremainder(double f1, double f2)
                
                 Computes the remainder operation on two arguments as prescribed
 by the IEEE 754 standard. | 
| static long | 
                abs(long a)
                
                 Returns the absolute value of a  longvalue. | 
| static int | 
                abs(int a)
                
                 Returns the absolute value of an  intvalue. | 
| static float | 
                abs(float a)
                
                 Returns the absolute value of a  floatvalue. | 
| static double | 
                abs(double a)
                
                 Returns the absolute value of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                acos(double a)
                
                 Returns the arc cosine of a value; the returned angle is in the
 range 0.0 through pi. | 
| static int | 
                addExact(int x, int y)
                
                 Returns the sum of its arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an  int. | 
| static long | 
                addExact(long x, long y)
                
                 Returns the sum of its arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a  long. | 
| static double | 
                asin(double a)
                
                 Returns the arc sine of a value; the returned angle is in the
 range -pi/2 through pi/2. | 
| static double | 
                atan(double a)
                
                 Returns the arc tangent of a value; the returned angle is in the
 range -pi/2 through pi/2. | 
| static double | 
                atan2(double y, double x)
                
                 Returns the angle theta from the conversion of rectangular
 coordinates ( x,y) to polar
 coordinates (r, theta). | 
| static double | 
                cbrt(double a)
                
                 Returns the cube root of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                ceil(double a)
                
                 Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity)
  doublevalue that is greater than or equal to the
 argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. | 
| static float | 
                copySign(float magnitude, float sign)
                
                 Returns the first floating-point argument with the sign of the
 second floating-point argument. | 
| static double | 
                copySign(double magnitude, double sign)
                
                 Returns the first floating-point argument with the sign of the
 second floating-point argument. | 
| static double | 
                cos(double a)
                
                 Returns the trigonometric cosine of an angle. | 
| static double | 
                cosh(double x)
                
                 Returns the hyperbolic cosine of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                exp(double a)
                
                 Returns Euler's number e raised to the power of a
  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                expm1(double x)
                
                 Returns ex -1. | 
| static double | 
                floor(double a)
                
                 Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
  doublevalue that is less than or equal to the
 argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. | 
| static int | 
                floorDiv(int x, int y)
                
                 Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
  intvalue that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient. | 
| static long | 
                floorDiv(long x, long y)
                
                 Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
  longvalue that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient. | 
| static long | 
                floorMod(long x, long y)
                
                 Returns the floor modulus of the  longarguments. | 
| static int | 
                floorMod(int x, int y)
                
                 Returns the floor modulus of the  intarguments. | 
| static int | 
                getExponent(double d)
                
                 Returns the unbiased exponent used in the representation of a
  double. | 
| static int | 
                getExponent(float f)
                
                 Returns the unbiased exponent used in the representation of a
  float. | 
| static double | 
                hypot(double x, double y)
                
                 Returns sqrt(x2 +y2)
 without intermediate overflow or underflow. | 
| static double | 
                log(double a)
                
                 Returns the natural logarithm (base e) of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                log10(double a)
                
                 Returns the base 10 logarithm of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                log1p(double x)
                
                 Returns the natural logarithm of the sum of the argument and 1. | 
| static int | 
                max(int a, int b)
                
                 Returns the greater of two  intvalues. | 
| static long | 
                max(long a, long b)
                
                 Returns the greater of two  longvalues. | 
| static float | 
                max(float a, float b)
                
                 Returns the greater of two  floatvalues. | 
| static double | 
                max(double a, double b)
                
                 Returns the greater of two  doublevalues. | 
| static float | 
                min(float a, float b)
                
                 Returns the smaller of two  floatvalues. | 
| static double | 
                min(double a, double b)
                
                 Returns the smaller of two  doublevalues. | 
| static int | 
                min(int a, int b)
                
                 Returns the smaller of two  intvalues. | 
| static long | 
                min(long a, long b)
                
                 Returns the smaller of two  longvalues. | 
| static int | 
                multiplyExact(int x, int y)
                
                 Returns the product of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an  int. | 
| static long | 
                multiplyExact(long x, long y)
                
                 Returns the product of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a  long. | 
| static double | 
                nextAfter(double start, double direction)
                
                 Returns the floating-point number adjacent to the first
 argument in the direction of the second argument. | 
| static float | 
                nextAfter(float start, double direction)
                
                 Returns the floating-point number adjacent to the first
 argument in the direction of the second argument. | 
| static double | 
                nextDown(double d)
                
                 Returns the floating-point value adjacent to  din
 the direction of negative infinity. | 
| static float | 
                nextDown(float f)
                
                 Returns the floating-point value adjacent to  fin
 the direction of negative infinity. | 
| static float | 
                nextUp(float f)
                
                 Returns the floating-point value adjacent to  fin
 the direction of positive infinity. | 
| static double | 
                nextUp(double d)
                
                 Returns the floating-point value adjacent to  din
 the direction of positive infinity. | 
| static double | 
                pow(double a, double b)
                
                 Returns the value of the first argument raised to the power of the
 second argument. | 
| static double | 
                random()
                
                 Returns a  doublevalue with a positive sign, greater
 than or equal to0.0and less than1.0. | 
| static double | 
                rint(double a)
                
                 Returns the  doublevalue that is closest in value
 to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. | 
| static long | 
                round(double a)
                
                 Returns the closest  longto the argument, with ties
 rounding to positive infinity. | 
| static int | 
                round(float a)
                
                 Returns the closest  intto the argument, with ties
 rounding to positive infinity. | 
| static float | 
                scalb(float f, int scaleFactor)
                
                 Returns  f×
 2scaleFactorrounded as if performed
 by a single correctly rounded floating-point multiply to a
 member of the float value set. | 
| static double | 
                scalb(double d, int scaleFactor)
                
                 Returns  d×
 2scaleFactorrounded as if performed
 by a single correctly rounded floating-point multiply to a
 member of the double value set. | 
| static double | 
                signum(double d)
                
                 Returns the signum function of the argument; zero if the argument
 is zero, 1.0 if the argument is greater than zero, -1.0 if the
 argument is less than zero. | 
| static float | 
                signum(float f)
                
                 Returns the signum function of the argument; zero if the argument
 is zero, 1.0f if the argument is greater than zero, -1.0f if the
 argument is less than zero. | 
| static double | 
                sin(double a)
                
                 Returns the trigonometric sine of an angle. | 
| static double | 
                sinh(double x)
                
                 Returns the hyperbolic sine of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                sqrt(double a)
                
                 Returns the correctly rounded positive square root of a
  doublevalue. | 
| static long | 
                subtractExact(long x, long y)
                
                 Returns the difference of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a  long. | 
| static int | 
                subtractExact(int x, int y)
                
                 Returns the difference of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an  int. | 
| static double | 
                tan(double a)
                
                 Returns the trigonometric tangent of an angle. | 
| static double | 
                tanh(double x)
                
                 Returns the hyperbolic tangent of a  doublevalue. | 
| static double | 
                toDegrees(double angrad)
                
                 Converts an angle measured in radians to an approximately
 equivalent angle measured in degrees. | 
| static int | 
                toIntExact(long value)
                
                 Returns the value of the  longargument;
 throwing an exception if the value overflows anint. | 
| static double | 
                toRadians(double angdeg)
                
                 Converts an angle measured in degrees to an approximately
 equivalent angle measured in radians. | 
| static double | 
                ulp(double d)
                
                 Returns the size of an ulp of the argument. | 
| static float | 
                ulp(float f)
                
                 Returns the size of an ulp of the argument. | 
Inherited Method Summary
Constants
public static final double E
The double value that is closer than any other to
 e, the base of the natural logarithms.
public static final double PI
The double value that is closer than any other to
 pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its
 diameter.
Public Methods
public static double IEEEremainder (double f1, double f2)
Computes the remainder operation on two arguments as prescribed
 by the IEEE 754 standard.
 The remainder value is mathematically equal to
 f1 - f2 × n,
 where n is the mathematical integer closest to the exact
 mathematical value of the quotient f1/f2, and if two
 mathematical integers are equally close to f1/f2,
 then n is the integer that is even. If the remainder is
 zero, its sign is the same as the sign of the first argument.
 Special cases:
 
- If either argument is NaN, or the first argument is infinite, or the second argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is NaN.
- If the first argument is finite and the second argument is infinite, then the result is the same as the first argument.
Parameters
| f1 | the dividend. | 
|---|---|
| f2 | the divisor. | 
Returns
- the remainder when f1is divided byf2.
public static long abs (long a)
Returns the absolute value of a long value.
 If the argument is not negative, the argument is returned.
 If the argument is negative, the negation of the argument is returned.
 
Note that if the argument is equal to the value of
 Long.MIN_VALUE, the most negative representable
 long value, the result is that same value, which
 is negative.
Parameters
| a | the argument whose absolute value is to be determined. | 
|---|
Returns
- the absolute value of the argument.
public static int abs (int a)
Returns the absolute value of an int value.
 If the argument is not negative, the argument is returned.
 If the argument is negative, the negation of the argument is returned.
 
Note that if the argument is equal to the value of
 Integer.MIN_VALUE, the most negative representable
 int value, the result is that same value, which is
 negative.
Parameters
| a | the argument whose absolute value is to be determined. | 
|---|
Returns
- the absolute value of the argument.
public static float abs (float a)
Returns the absolute value of a float value.
 If the argument is not negative, the argument is returned.
 If the argument is negative, the negation of the argument is returned.
 Special cases:
 
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, the result is positive zero.
- If the argument is infinite, the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
Float.intBitsToFloat(0x7fffffff & Float.floatToIntBits(a))
Parameters
| a | the argument whose absolute value is to be determined | 
|---|
Returns
- the absolute value of the argument.
public static double abs (double a)
Returns the absolute value of a double value.
 If the argument is not negative, the argument is returned.
 If the argument is negative, the negation of the argument is returned.
 Special cases:
 
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, the result is positive zero.
- If the argument is infinite, the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
Double.longBitsToDouble((Double.doubleToLongBits(a)<<1)>>>1)
Parameters
| a | the argument whose absolute value is to be determined | 
|---|
Returns
- the absolute value of the argument.
public static double acos (double a)
Returns the arc cosine of a value; the returned angle is in the range 0.0 through pi. Special case:
- If the argument is NaN or its absolute value is greater than 1, then the result is NaN.
Parameters
| a | the value whose arc cosine is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- the arc cosine of the argument.
public static int addExact (int x, int y)
Returns the sum of its arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an int.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows an int | 
|---|
See Also
public static long addExact (long x, long y)
Returns the sum of its arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a long.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows a long | 
|---|
See Also
public static double asin (double a)
Returns the arc sine of a value; the returned angle is in the range -pi/2 through pi/2. Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN or its absolute value is greater than 1, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| a | the value whose arc sine is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- the arc sine of the argument.
public static double atan (double a)
Returns the arc tangent of a value; the returned angle is in the range -pi/2 through pi/2. Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| a | the value whose arc tangent is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- the arc tangent of the argument.
public static double atan2 (double y, double x)
Returns the angle theta from the conversion of rectangular
 coordinates (x, y) to polar
 coordinates (r, theta).
 This method computes the phase theta by computing an arc tangent
 of y/x in the range of -pi to pi. Special
 cases:
 
- If either argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the first argument is positive zero and the second argument is positive, or the first argument is positive and finite and the second argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive zero.
- If the first argument is negative zero and the second argument is positive, or the first argument is negative and finite and the second argument is positive infinity, then the result is negative zero.
- If the first argument is positive zero and the second argument
 is negative, or the first argument is positive and finite and the
 second argument is negative infinity, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to pi.
- If the first argument is negative zero and the second argument
 is negative, or the first argument is negative and finite and the
 second argument is negative infinity, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to -pi.
- If the first argument is positive and the second argument is
 positive zero or negative zero, or the first argument is positive
 infinity and the second argument is finite, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to pi/2.
- If the first argument is negative and the second argument is
 positive zero or negative zero, or the first argument is negative
 infinity and the second argument is finite, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to -pi/2.
- If both arguments are positive infinity, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to pi/4.
- If the first argument is positive infinity and the second argument
 is negative infinity, then the result is the doublevalue closest to 3*pi/4.
- If the first argument is negative infinity and the second argument
 is positive infinity, then the result is the doublevalue closest to -pi/4.
- If both arguments are negative infinity, then the result is the
 doublevalue closest to -3*pi/4.
Parameters
| y | the ordinate coordinate | 
|---|---|
| x | the abscissa coordinate | 
Returns
- the theta component of the point (r, theta) in polar coordinates that corresponds to the point (x, y) in Cartesian coordinates.
public static double cbrt (double a)
Returns the cube root of a double value.  For
 positive finite x, cbrt(-x) ==
 -cbrt(x); that is, the cube root of a negative value is
 the negative of the cube root of that value's magnitude.
 Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is infinite, then the result is an infinity with the same sign as the argument.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| a | a value. | 
|---|
Returns
- the cube root of a.
public static double ceil (double a)
Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity)
 double value that is greater than or equal to the
 argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. Special cases:
 
- If the argument value is already equal to a mathematical integer, then the result is the same as the argument.
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity or positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
- If the argument value is less than zero but greater than -1.0, then the result is negative zero.
StrictMath.ceil(x) is exactly the
 value of -StrictMath.floor(-x).Parameters
| a | a value. | 
|---|
Returns
- the smallest (closest to negative infinity) floating-point value that is greater than or equal to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer.
public static float copySign (float magnitude, float sign)
Returns the first floating-point argument with the sign of the
 second floating-point argument.  For this method, a NaN
 sign argument is always treated as if it were
 positive.
Parameters
| magnitude | the parameter providing the magnitude of the result | 
|---|---|
| sign | the parameter providing the sign of the result | 
Returns
- a value with the magnitude of magnitudeand the sign ofsign.
public static double copySign (double magnitude, double sign)
Returns the first floating-point argument with the sign of the
 second floating-point argument.  For this method, a NaN
 sign argument is always treated as if it were
 positive.
Parameters
| magnitude | the parameter providing the magnitude of the result | 
|---|---|
| sign | the parameter providing the sign of the result | 
Returns
- a value with the magnitude of magnitudeand the sign ofsign.
public static double cos (double a)
Returns the trigonometric cosine of an angle. Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity, then the result is NaN.
Parameters
| a | an angle, in radians. | 
|---|
Returns
- the cosine of the argument.
public static double cosh (double x)
Returns the hyperbolic cosine of a double value.
 The hyperbolic cosine of x is defined to be
 (ex + e-x)/2
 where e is {@linkplain Math#E Euler's number}.
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is infinite, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is 1.0.
Parameters
| x | The number whose hyperbolic cosine is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- The hyperbolic cosine of x.
public static double exp (double a)
Returns Euler's number e raised to the power of a
 double value. Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is negative infinity, then the result is positive zero.
Parameters
| a | the exponent to raise e to. | 
|---|
Returns
- the value ea, where e is the base of the natural logarithms.
public static double expm1 (double x)
Returns ex -1.  Note that for values of
 x near 0, the exact sum of
 expm1(x) + 1 is much closer to the true
 result of ex than exp(x).
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is negative infinity, then the result is -1.0.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| x | the exponent to raise e to in the computation of
              e x-1. | 
|---|
Returns
- the value ex- 1.
public static double floor (double a)
Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
 double value that is less than or equal to the
 argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. Special cases:
 
- If the argument value is already equal to a mathematical integer, then the result is the same as the argument.
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity or positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
Parameters
| a | a value. | 
|---|
Returns
- the largest (closest to positive infinity) floating-point value that less than or equal to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer.
public static int floorDiv (int x, int y)
Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
 int value that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient.
 There is one special case, if the dividend is the
 {@linkplain Integer#MIN_VALUE Integer.MIN_VALUE} and the divisor is -1,
 then integer overflow occurs and
 the result is equal to the Integer.MIN_VALUE.
 
 See Math.floorDiv for examples and
 a comparison to the integer division / operator.
Parameters
| x | the dividend | 
|---|---|
| y | the divisor | 
Returns
- the largest (closest to positive infinity)
 intvalue that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient.
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the divisor yis zero | 
|---|
public static long floorDiv (long x, long y)
Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
 long value that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient.
 There is one special case, if the dividend is the
 {@linkplain Long#MIN_VALUE Long.MIN_VALUE} and the divisor is -1,
 then integer overflow occurs and
 the result is equal to the Long.MIN_VALUE.
 
 See Math.floorDiv for examples and
 a comparison to the integer division / operator.
Parameters
| x | the dividend | 
|---|---|
| y | the divisor | 
Returns
- the largest (closest to positive infinity)
 longvalue that is less than or equal to the algebraic quotient.
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the divisor yis zero | 
|---|
public static long floorMod (long x, long y)
Returns the floor modulus of the long arguments.
 
 The floor modulus is x - (floorDiv(x, y) * y),
 has the same sign as the divisor y, and
 is in the range of -abs(y) < r < +abs(y).
 
 The relationship between floorDiv and floorMod is such that:
 
- floorDiv(x, y) * y + floorMod(x, y) == x
 See Math.floorMod for examples and
 a comparison to the % operator.
Parameters
| x | the dividend | 
|---|---|
| y | the divisor | 
Returns
- the floor modulus x - (floorDiv(x, y) * y)
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the divisor yis zero | 
|---|
public static int floorMod (int x, int y)
Returns the floor modulus of the int arguments.
 
 The floor modulus is x - (floorDiv(x, y) * y),
 has the same sign as the divisor y, and
 is in the range of -abs(y) < r < +abs(y).
 
 The relationship between floorDiv and floorMod is such that:
 
- floorDiv(x, y) * y + floorMod(x, y) == x
 See Math.floorMod for examples and
 a comparison to the % operator.
Parameters
| x | the dividend | 
|---|---|
| y | the divisor | 
Returns
- the floor modulus x - (floorDiv(x, y) * y)
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the divisor yis zero | 
|---|
public static int getExponent (double d)
Returns the unbiased exponent used in the representation of a
 double.  Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN or infinite, then the result is
 Double.MAX_EXPONENT+ 1.
- If the argument is zero or subnormal, then the result is
 Double.MIN_EXPONENT-1.
Parameters
| d | a doublevalue | 
|---|
Returns
- the unbiased exponent of the argument
public static int getExponent (float f)
Returns the unbiased exponent used in the representation of a
 float.  Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN or infinite, then the result is
 Float.MAX_EXPONENT+ 1.
- If the argument is zero or subnormal, then the result is
 Float.MIN_EXPONENT-1.
Parameters
| f | a floatvalue | 
|---|
Returns
- the unbiased exponent of the argument
public static double hypot (double x, double y)
Returns sqrt(x2 +y2) without intermediate overflow or underflow.
Special cases:
- If either argument is infinite, then the result is positive infinity.
- If either argument is NaN and neither argument is infinite, then the result is NaN.
Parameters
| x | a value | 
|---|---|
| y | a value | 
Returns
- sqrt(x2 +y2) without intermediate overflow or underflow
public static double log (double a)
Returns the natural logarithm (base e) of a double
 value. Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN or less than zero, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is negative infinity.
Parameters
| a | a value | 
|---|
Returns
- the value ln a, the natural logarithm ofa.
public static double log10 (double a)
Returns the base 10 logarithm of a double value.
 Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN or less than zero, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is negative infinity.
- If the argument is equal to 10n for integer n, then the result is n.
Parameters
| a | a value | 
|---|
Returns
- the base 10 logarithm of  a.
public static double log1p (double x)
Returns the natural logarithm of the sum of the argument and 1.
 Note that for small values x, the result of
 log1p(x) is much closer to the true result of ln(1
 + x) than the floating-point evaluation of
 log(1.0+x).
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN or less than -1, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is negative one, then the result is negative infinity.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| x | a value | 
|---|
Returns
- the value ln(x+ 1), the natural log ofx+ 1
public static int max (int a, int b)
Returns the greater of two int values. That is, the
 result is the argument closer to the value of
 Integer.MAX_VALUE. If the arguments have the same value,
 the result is that same value.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the larger of aandb.
public static long max (long a, long b)
Returns the greater of two long values. That is, the
 result is the argument closer to the value of
 Long.MAX_VALUE. If the arguments have the same value,
 the result is that same value.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the larger of aandb.
public static float max (float a, float b)
Returns the greater of two float values.  That is,
 the result is the argument closer to positive infinity. If the
 arguments have the same value, the result is that same
 value. If either value is NaN, then the result is NaN.  Unlike
 the numerical comparison operators, this method considers
 negative zero to be strictly smaller than positive zero. If one
 argument is positive zero and the other negative zero, the
 result is positive zero.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the larger of aandb.
public static double max (double a, double b)
Returns the greater of two double values.  That
 is, the result is the argument closer to positive infinity. If
 the arguments have the same value, the result is that same
 value. If either value is NaN, then the result is NaN.  Unlike
 the numerical comparison operators, this method considers
 negative zero to be strictly smaller than positive zero. If one
 argument is positive zero and the other negative zero, the
 result is positive zero.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the larger of aandb.
public static float min (float a, float b)
Returns the smaller of two float values.  That is,
 the result is the value closer to negative infinity. If the
 arguments have the same value, the result is that same
 value. If either value is NaN, then the result is NaN.  Unlike
 the numerical comparison operators, this method considers
 negative zero to be strictly smaller than positive zero.  If
 one argument is positive zero and the other is negative zero,
 the result is negative zero.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the smaller of aandb.
public static double min (double a, double b)
Returns the smaller of two double values.  That
 is, the result is the value closer to negative infinity. If the
 arguments have the same value, the result is that same
 value. If either value is NaN, then the result is NaN.  Unlike
 the numerical comparison operators, this method considers
 negative zero to be strictly smaller than positive zero. If one
 argument is positive zero and the other is negative zero, the
 result is negative zero.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the smaller of aandb.
public static int min (int a, int b)
Returns the smaller of two int values. That is,
 the result the argument closer to the value of
 Integer.MIN_VALUE.  If the arguments have the same
 value, the result is that same value.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the smaller of aandb.
public static long min (long a, long b)
Returns the smaller of two long values. That is,
 the result is the argument closer to the value of
 Long.MIN_VALUE. If the arguments have the same
 value, the result is that same value.
Parameters
| a | an argument. | 
|---|---|
| b | another argument. | 
Returns
- the smaller of aandb.
public static int multiplyExact (int x, int y)
Returns the product of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an int.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows an int | 
|---|
See Also
public static long multiplyExact (long x, long y)
Returns the product of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a long.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows a long | 
|---|
See Also
public static double nextAfter (double start, double direction)
Returns the floating-point number adjacent to the first argument in the direction of the second argument. If both arguments compare as equal the second argument is returned.
Special cases:
- If either argument is a NaN, then NaN is returned.
-  If both arguments are signed zeros, directionis returned unchanged (as implied by the requirement of returning the second argument if the arguments compare as equal).
-  If startis ±Double.MIN_VALUEanddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a smaller magnitude, then a zero with the same sign asstartis returned.
-  If startis infinite anddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a smaller magnitude,Double.MAX_VALUEwith the same sign asstartis returned.
-  If startis equal to ±Double.MAX_VALUEanddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a larger magnitude, an infinity with same sign asstartis returned.
Parameters
| start | starting floating-point value | 
|---|---|
| direction | value indicating which of start's neighbors orstartshould
 be returned | 
Returns
- The floating-point number adjacent to startin the direction ofdirection.
public static float nextAfter (float start, double direction)
Returns the floating-point number adjacent to the first argument in the direction of the second argument. If both arguments compare as equal a value equivalent to the second argument is returned.
Special cases:
- If either argument is a NaN, then NaN is returned.
-  If both arguments are signed zeros, a value equivalent
 to directionis returned.
-  If startis ±Float.MIN_VALUEanddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a smaller magnitude, then a zero with the same sign asstartis returned.
-  If startis infinite anddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a smaller magnitude,Float.MAX_VALUEwith the same sign asstartis returned.
-  If startis equal to ±Float.MAX_VALUEanddirectionhas a value such that the result should have a larger magnitude, an infinity with same sign asstartis returned.
Parameters
| start | starting floating-point value | 
|---|---|
| direction | value indicating which of start's neighbors orstartshould
 be returned | 
Returns
- The floating-point number adjacent to startin the direction ofdirection.
public static double nextDown (double d)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to d in
 the direction of negative infinity.  This method is
 semantically equivalent to nextAfter(d,
 Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY); however, a
 nextDown implementation may run faster than its
 equivalent nextAfter call.
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is negative infinity, the result is negative infinity.
-  If the argument is zero, the result is
 -Double.MIN_VALUE
Parameters
| d | starting floating-point value | 
|---|
Returns
- The adjacent floating-point value closer to negative infinity.
public static float nextDown (float f)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to f in
 the direction of negative infinity.  This method is
 semantically equivalent to nextAfter(f,
 Float.NEGATIVE_INFINITY); however, a
 nextDown implementation may run faster than its
 equivalent nextAfter call.
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is negative infinity, the result is negative infinity.
-  If the argument is zero, the result is
 -Float.MIN_VALUE
Parameters
| f | starting floating-point value | 
|---|
Returns
- The adjacent floating-point value closer to negative infinity.
public static float nextUp (float f)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to f in
 the direction of positive infinity.  This method is
 semantically equivalent to nextAfter(f,
 Float.POSITIVE_INFINITY); however, a nextUp
 implementation may run faster than its equivalent
 nextAfter call.
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, the result is positive infinity.
-  If the argument is zero, the result is
 Float.MIN_VALUE
Parameters
| f | starting floating-point value | 
|---|
Returns
- The adjacent floating-point value closer to positive infinity.
public static double nextUp (double d)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to d in
 the direction of positive infinity.  This method is
 semantically equivalent to nextAfter(d,
 Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY); however, a nextUp
 implementation may run faster than its equivalent
 nextAfter call.
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, the result is positive infinity.
-  If the argument is zero, the result is
 Double.MIN_VALUE
Parameters
| d | starting floating-point value | 
|---|
Returns
- The adjacent floating-point value closer to positive infinity.
public static double pow (double a, double b)
Returns the value of the first argument raised to the power of the second argument. Special cases:
- If the second argument is positive or negative zero, then the result is 1.0.
- If the second argument is 1.0, then the result is the same as the first argument.
- If the second argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the first argument is NaN and the second argument is nonzero, then the result is NaN.
- If
 - the absolute value of the first argument is greater than 1 and the second argument is positive infinity, or
- the absolute value of the first argument is less than 1 and the second argument is negative infinity,
 
- If
 - the absolute value of the first argument is greater than 1 and the second argument is negative infinity, or
- the absolute value of the first argument is less than 1 and the second argument is positive infinity,
 
- If the absolute value of the first argument equals 1 and the second argument is infinite, then the result is NaN.
- If
 - the first argument is positive zero and the second argument is greater than zero, or
- the first argument is positive infinity and the second argument is less than zero,
 
- If
 - the first argument is positive zero and the second argument is less than zero, or
- the first argument is positive infinity and the second argument is greater than zero,
 
- If
 - the first argument is negative zero and the second argument is greater than zero but not a finite odd integer, or
- the first argument is negative infinity and the second argument is less than zero but not a finite odd integer,
 
- If
 - the first argument is negative zero and the second argument is a positive finite odd integer, or
- the first argument is negative infinity and the second argument is a negative finite odd integer,
 
- If
 - the first argument is negative zero and the second argument is less than zero but not a finite odd integer, or
- the first argument is negative infinity and the second argument is greater than zero but not a finite odd integer,
 
- If
 - the first argument is negative zero and the second argument is a negative finite odd integer, or
- the first argument is negative infinity and the second argument is a positive finite odd integer,
 
- If the first argument is finite and less than zero
 - if the second argument is a finite even integer, the result is equal to the result of raising the absolute value of the first argument to the power of the second argument
- if the second argument is a finite odd integer, the result is equal to the negative of the result of raising the absolute value of the first argument to the power of the second argument
- if the second argument is finite and not an integer, then the result is NaN.
 
- If both arguments are integers, then the result is exactly equal
 to the mathematical result of raising the first argument to the power
 of the second argument if that result can in fact be represented
 exactly as a doublevalue.
(In the foregoing descriptions, a floating-point value is
 considered to be an integer if and only if it is finite and a
 fixed point of the method ceil or,
 equivalently, a fixed point of the method floor. A value is a fixed point of a one-argument
 method if and only if the result of applying the method to the
 value is equal to the value.)
Parameters
| a | base. | 
|---|---|
| b | the exponent. | 
Returns
- the value ab.
public static double random ()
Returns a double value with a positive sign, greater
 than or equal to 0.0 and less than 1.0.
 Returned values are chosen pseudorandomly with (approximately)
 uniform distribution from that range.
 
When this method is first called, it creates a single new pseudorandom-number generator, exactly as if by the expression
new java.util.Random()This method is properly synchronized to allow correct use by more than one thread. However, if many threads need to generate pseudorandom numbers at a great rate, it may reduce contention for each thread to have its own pseudorandom-number generator.
Returns
- a pseudorandom doublegreater than or equal to0.0and less than1.0.
See Also
public static double rint (double a)
Returns the double value that is closest in value
 to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer. If two
 double values that are mathematical integers are
 equally close to the value of the argument, the result is the
 integer value that is even. Special cases:
 
- If the argument value is already equal to a mathematical integer, then the result is the same as the argument.
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity or positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
Parameters
| a | a value. | 
|---|
Returns
- the closest floating-point value to athat is equal to a mathematical integer.
public static long round (double a)
Returns the closest long to the argument, with ties
 rounding to positive infinity.
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is 0.
- If the argument is negative infinity or any value less than or
 equal to the value of Long.MIN_VALUE, the result is equal to the value ofLong.MIN_VALUE.
- If the argument is positive infinity or any value greater than or
 equal to the value of Long.MAX_VALUE, the result is equal to the value ofLong.MAX_VALUE.
Parameters
| a | a floating-point value to be rounded to a long. | 
|---|
Returns
- the value of the argument rounded to the nearest
          longvalue.
See Also
public static int round (float a)
Returns the closest int to the argument, with ties
 rounding to positive infinity.
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, the result is 0.
- If the argument is negative infinity or any value less than or
 equal to the value of Integer.MIN_VALUE, the result is equal to the value ofInteger.MIN_VALUE.
- If the argument is positive infinity or any value greater than or
 equal to the value of Integer.MAX_VALUE, the result is equal to the value ofInteger.MAX_VALUE.
Parameters
| a | a floating-point value to be rounded to an integer. | 
|---|
Returns
- the value of the argument rounded to the nearest
          intvalue.
See Also
public static float scalb (float f, int scaleFactor)
Returns f ×
 2scaleFactor rounded as if performed
 by a single correctly rounded floating-point multiply to a
 member of the float value set.  See the Java
 Language Specification for a discussion of floating-point
 value sets.  If the exponent of the result is between Float.MIN_EXPONENT and Float.MAX_EXPONENT, the
 answer is calculated exactly.  If the exponent of the result
 would be larger than Float.MAX_EXPONENT, an
 infinity is returned.  Note that if the result is subnormal,
 precision may be lost; that is, when scalb(x, n)
 is subnormal, scalb(scalb(x, n), -n) may not equal
 x.  When the result is non-NaN, the result has the same
 sign as f.
 
Special cases:
- If the first argument is NaN, NaN is returned.
- If the first argument is infinite, then an infinity of the same sign is returned.
- If the first argument is zero, then a zero of the same sign is returned.
Parameters
| f | number to be scaled by a power of two. | 
|---|---|
| scaleFactor | power of 2 used to scale f | 
Returns
- f× 2- scaleFactor
public static double scalb (double d, int scaleFactor)
Returns d ×
 2scaleFactor rounded as if performed
 by a single correctly rounded floating-point multiply to a
 member of the double value set.  See the Java
 Language Specification for a discussion of floating-point
 value sets.  If the exponent of the result is between Double.MIN_EXPONENT and Double.MAX_EXPONENT, the
 answer is calculated exactly.  If the exponent of the result
 would be larger than Double.MAX_EXPONENT, an
 infinity is returned.  Note that if the result is subnormal,
 precision may be lost; that is, when scalb(x, n)
 is subnormal, scalb(scalb(x, n), -n) may not equal
 x.  When the result is non-NaN, the result has the same
 sign as d.
 
Special cases:
- If the first argument is NaN, NaN is returned.
- If the first argument is infinite, then an infinity of the same sign is returned.
- If the first argument is zero, then a zero of the same sign is returned.
Parameters
| d | number to be scaled by a power of two. | 
|---|---|
| scaleFactor | power of 2 used to scale d | 
Returns
- d× 2- scaleFactor
public static double signum (double d)
Returns the signum function of the argument; zero if the argument is zero, 1.0 if the argument is greater than zero, -1.0 if the argument is less than zero.
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
Parameters
| d | the floating-point value whose signum is to be returned | 
|---|
Returns
- the signum function of the argument
public static float signum (float f)
Returns the signum function of the argument; zero if the argument is zero, 1.0f if the argument is greater than zero, -1.0f if the argument is less than zero.
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
Parameters
| f | the floating-point value whose signum is to be returned | 
|---|
Returns
- the signum function of the argument
public static double sin (double a)
Returns the trigonometric sine of an angle. Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| a | an angle, in radians. | 
|---|
Returns
- the sine of the argument.
public static double sinh (double x)
Returns the hyperbolic sine of a double value.
 The hyperbolic sine of x is defined to be
 (ex - e-x)/2
 where e is {@linkplain Math#E Euler's number}.
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is infinite, then the result is an infinity with the same sign as the argument.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| x | The number whose hyperbolic sine is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- The hyperbolic sine of x.
public static double sqrt (double a)
Returns the correctly rounded positive square root of a
 double value.
 Special cases:
 
- If the argument is NaN or less than zero, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
- If the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then the result is the same as the argument.
double value closest to
 the true mathematical square root of the argument value.Parameters
| a | a value. | 
|---|
Returns
- the positive square root of a.
public static long subtractExact (long x, long y)
Returns the difference of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows a long.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value to subtract from the first | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows a long | 
|---|
See Also
public static int subtractExact (int x, int y)
Returns the difference of the arguments,
 throwing an exception if the result overflows an int.
Parameters
| x | the first value | 
|---|---|
| y | the second value to subtract from the first | 
Returns
- the result
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the result overflows an int | 
|---|
See Also
public static double tan (double a)
Returns the trigonometric tangent of an angle. Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN or an infinity, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
Parameters
| a | an angle, in radians. | 
|---|
Returns
- the tangent of the argument.
public static double tanh (double x)
Returns the hyperbolic tangent of a double value.
 The hyperbolic tangent of x is defined to be
 (ex - e-x)/(ex + e-x),
 in other words, {@linkplain Math#sinh
 sinh(x)}/{@linkplain Math#cosh cosh(x)}.  Note
 that the absolute value of the exact tanh is always less than
 1.
 
Special cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
- If the argument is positive infinity, then the result is
 +1.0.
- If the argument is negative infinity, then the result is
 -1.0.
Parameters
| x | The number whose hyperbolic tangent is to be returned. | 
|---|
Returns
- The hyperbolic tangent of x.
public static double toDegrees (double angrad)
Converts an angle measured in radians to an approximately
 equivalent angle measured in degrees.  The conversion from
 radians to degrees is generally inexact; users should
 not expect cos(toRadians(90.0)) to exactly
 equal 0.0.
Parameters
| angrad | an angle, in radians | 
|---|
Returns
- the measurement of the angle angradin degrees.
public static int toIntExact (long value)
Returns the value of the long argument;
 throwing an exception if the value overflows an int.
Parameters
| value | the long value | 
|---|
Returns
- the argument as an int
Throws
| ArithmeticException | if the argumentoverflows an int | 
|---|
See Also
public static double toRadians (double angdeg)
Converts an angle measured in degrees to an approximately equivalent angle measured in radians. The conversion from degrees to radians is generally inexact.
Parameters
| angdeg | an angle, in degrees | 
|---|
Returns
- the measurement of the angle angdegin radians.
public static double ulp (double d)
Returns the size of an ulp of the argument.  An ulp, unit in
 the last place, of a double value is the positive
 distance between this floating-point value and the double value next larger in magnitude.  Note that for non-NaN
 x, ulp(-x) == ulp(x).
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive or negative infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
-  If the argument is positive or negative zero, then the result is
 Double.MIN_VALUE.
-  If the argument is ±Double.MAX_VALUE, then the result is equal to 2971.
Parameters
| d | the floating-point value whose ulp is to be returned | 
|---|
Returns
- the size of an ulp of the argument
public static float ulp (float f)
Returns the size of an ulp of the argument.  An ulp, unit in
 the last place, of a float value is the positive
 distance between this floating-point value and the float value next larger in magnitude.  Note that for non-NaN
 x, ulp(-x) == ulp(x).
 
Special Cases:
- If the argument is NaN, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is positive or negative infinity, then the result is positive infinity.
-  If the argument is positive or negative zero, then the result is
 Float.MIN_VALUE.
-  If the argument is ±Float.MAX_VALUE, then the result is equal to 2104.
Parameters
| f | the floating-point value whose ulp is to be returned | 
|---|
Returns
- the size of an ulp of the argument
