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Miscellaneous FP arithmetic functions

The functions in this section perform miscellaneous but common operations that are awkward to express with C operators. On some processors these functions can use special machine instructions to perform these operations faster than the equivalent C code.

Function: double fmin (double x, double y)
Function: float fminf (float x, float y)
Function: long double fminl (long double x, long double y)
The fmin function returns the lesser of the two values x and y. It is similar to the expression
((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y))

except that x and y are only evaluated once.

If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments are NaN, NaN is returned.

Function: double fmax (double x, double y)
Function: float fmaxf (float x, float y)
Function: long double fmaxl (long double x, long double y)
The fmax function returns the greater of the two values x and y.

If an argument is NaN, the other argument is returned. If both arguments are NaN, NaN is returned.

Function: double fdim (double x, double y)
Function: float fdimf (float x, float y)
Function: long double fdiml (long double x, long double y)
The fdim function returns the positive difference between x and y. The positive difference is @math{x - y} if x is greater than y, and @math{0} otherwise.

If x, y, or both are NaN, NaN is returned.

Function: double fma (double x, double y, double z)
Function: float fmaf (float x, float y, float z)
Function: long double fmal (long double x, long double y, long double z)
The fma function performs floating-point multiply-add. This is the operation @math{(x @mul{} y) + z}, but the intermediate result is not rounded to the destination type. This can sometimes improve the precision of a calculation.

This function was introduced because some processors have a special instruction to perform multiply-add. The C compiler cannot use it directly, because the expression `x*y + z' is defined to round the intermediate result. fma lets you choose when you want to round only once.

On processors which do not implement multiply-add in hardware, fma can be very slow since it must avoid intermediate rounding. `math.h' defines the symbols FP_FAST_FMA, FP_FAST_FMAF, and FP_FAST_FMAL when the corresponding version of fma is no slower than the expression `x*y + z'. In the GNU C library, this always means the operation is implemented in hardware.


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