feraiseexcept(3)
NAME
feclearexcept, fegetexceptflag, feraiseexcept, fesetexceptflag, fetestexcept -- floating-point exception flag manipulation
LIBRARY
Math Library (libm, -lm)
SYNOPSIS
#include <fenv.h> #pragma STDC FENV_ACCESS ON int feclearexcept(int excepts); int fegetexceptflag(fexcept_t *flagp, int excepts); int feraiseexcept(int excepts); int fesetexceptflag(const fexcept_t *flagp, int excepts); int fetestexcept(int excepts);
DESCRIPTION
The feclearexcept() routine clears the floating-point exception flags specified by excepts, whereas feraiseexcept() raises the specified excep- tions. Raising an exception causes the corresponding flag to be set, and a SIGFPE is delivered to the process if the exception is unmasked. The fetestexcept() function determines which flags are currently set, of those specified by excepts. The fegetexceptflag() function stores the state of the exception flags specified in excepts in the opaque object pointed to by flagp. Simi- larly, fesetexceptflag() changes the specified exception flags to reflect the state stored in the object pointed to by flagp. Note that the flags restored with fesetexceptflag() must be a (not necessarily proper) subset of the flags recorded by a prior call to fegetexceptflag(). For all of these functions, the possible types of exceptions include those described in fenv(3). Some architectures may define other types of floating-point exceptions.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
On some architectures, raising an overflow or underflow exception also causes an inexact exception to be raised. In these cases, the overflow or underflow will be raised first. The fegetexceptflag() and fesetexceptflag() routines are preferred to fetestexcept() and feraiseexcept(), respectively, for saving and restor- ing exception flags. The latter do not re-raise exceptions and may pre- serve architecture-specific information such as addresses where excep- tions occurred. fpresetsticky(3)
STANDARDS
The feclearexcept(), fegetexceptflag(), feraiseexcept(), fesetexceptflag(), and fetestexcept() routines conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (``ISO C99'').
HISTORY
These functions first appeared in FreeBSD 5.3. FreeBSD 5.4 May 8, 2004 FreeBSD 5.4
SPONSORED LINKS
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