These mathematical functions allow integers as well as floating-point numbers as arguments.
These are the basic trigonometric functions, with argument arg measured in radians.
The value of (asin arg)
is a number between -pi/2 and pi/2 (inclusive) whose sine is arg. If arg is out of range (outside [-1, 1]), asin
returns a NaN.
The value of (acos arg)
is a number between 0 and pi (inclusive) whose cosine is arg. If arg is out of range (outside [-1, 1]), acos
returns a NaN.
The value of (atan y)
is a number between -pi/2 and pi/2 (exclusive) whose tangent is y. If the optional second argument x is given, the value of (atan y x)
is the angle in radians between the vector [x, y]
and the X
axis.
This is the exponential function; it returns e to the power arg.
This function returns the logarithm of arg, with base base. If you don’t specify base, the natural base e is used. If arg or base is negative, log
returns a NaN.
This function returns x raised to power y. If both arguments are integers and y is nonnegative, the result is an integer; in this case, overflow signals an error, so watch out. If x is a finite negative number and y is a finite non-integer, expt
returns a NaN.
This returns the square root of arg. If arg is finite and less than zero, sqrt
returns a NaN.
In addition, Emacs defines the following common mathematical constants:
The mathematical constant e (2.71828…).
The mathematical constant pi (3.14159…).
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Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Math-Functions.html