Defined in header <math.h> | ||
|---|---|---|
float floorf( float arg ); | (1) | (since C99) |
double floor( double arg ); | (2) | |
long double floorl( long double arg ); | (3) | (since C99) |
Defined in header <tgmath.h> | ||
#define floor( arg ) | (4) | (since C99) |
arg.arg has type long double, floorl is called. Otherwise, if arg has integer type or the type double, floor is called. Otherwise, floorf is called.| arg | - | floating point value |
If no errors occur, the largest integer value not greater than arg, that is ⌊arg⌋, is returned.
Errors are reported as specified in math_errhandling.
If the implementation supports IEEE floating-point arithmetic (IEC 60559),
arg is ±∞, it is returned, unmodified arg is ±0, it is returned, unmodified FE_INEXACT may be (but isn't required to be) raised when rounding a non-integer finite value.
The largest representable floating-point values are exact integers in all standard floating-point formats, so this function never overflows on its own; however the result may overflow any integer type (including intmax_t), when stored in an integer variable.
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
printf("floor(+2.7) = %+.1f\n", floor(2.7));
printf("floor(-2.7) = %+.1f\n", floor(-2.7));
printf("floor(-0.0) = %+.1f\n", floor(-0.0));
printf("floor(-Inf) = %+f\n", floor(-INFINITY));
}Possible output:
floor(+2.7) = +2.0 floor(-2.7) = -3.0 floor(-0.0) = -0.0 floor(-Inf) = -inf
|
(C99)(C99) | computes smallest integer not less than the given value (function) |
|
(C99)(C99)(C99) | rounds to nearest integer not greater in magnitude than the given value (function) |
|
(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99)(C99) | rounds to nearest integer, rounding away from zero in halfway cases (function) |
C++ documentation for floor |
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