tanh, tanhf, tanhl (original) (raw)
Calculates the hyperbolic tangent.
Syntax
double tanh( double x );
float tanhf( float x );
long double tanhl( long double x );
#define tanh(x) // Requires C11 or later
float tanh( float x ); // C++ only
long double tanh( long double x ); // C++ only
Parameters
x
Angle in radians.
Return value
The tanh functions return the hyperbolic tangent of x. There's no error return.
| Input | SEH exception | _matherr exception |
|---|---|---|
| ± QNaN, IND | none | _DOMAIN |
Because C++ allows overloading, you can call overloads of tanh that take and return float or long double values. In a C program, unless you're using the <tgmath.h> macro to call this function, tanh always takes and returns double.
If you use the tanh macro from <tgmath.h>, the type of the argument determines which version of the function is selected. See Type-generic math for details.
By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.
Requirements
| Routine | Required header (C) | Required header (C) |
|---|---|---|
| tanh, tanhf, tanhl | <math.h> | or <math.h> |
| tanh macro | <tgmath.h> |
For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.
Example
// crt_tanh.c
// This program displays the tangent of pi / 4
// and the hyperbolic tangent of the result.
// Compile by using: cl crt_tanh.c
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main( void )
{
double pi = 3.1415926535;
double x, y;
x = tan( pi / 4 );
y = tanh( x );
printf( "tan( %f ) = %f\n", pi/4, x );
printf( "tanh( %f ) = %f\n", x, y );
}
tan( 0.785398 ) = 1.000000
tanh( 1.000000 ) = 0.761594
See also
Math and floating-point support
acosh, acoshf, acoshl
asinh, asinhf, asinhl
atanh, atanhf, atanhl
cosh, coshf, coshl
sinh, sinhf, sinhl