| Defined in header <math.h> | ||
|---|---|---|
| #define isgreaterequal(x, y) /* implementation defined */ | (since C99) | 
Determines if the floating point number x is greater than or equal to the floating-point number y, without setting floating-point exceptions.
| x | - | floating point value | 
| y | - | floating point value | 
Nonzero integral value if x >= y, 0 otherwise.
The built-in operator>= for floating-point numbers may raise FE_INVALID if one or both of the arguments is NaN. This function is a "quiet" version of operator>=.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
 
int main(void)
{
    printf("isgreaterequal(2.0,1.0)      = %d\n", isgreaterequal(2.0,1.0));
    printf("isgreaterequal(1.0,2.0)      = %d\n", isgreaterequal(1.0,2.0));
    printf("isgreaterequal(1.0,1.0)      = %d\n", isgreaterequal(1.0,1.0));
    printf("isgreaterequal(INFINITY,1.0) = %d\n", isgreaterequal(INFINITY,1.0));
    printf("isgreaterequal(1.0,NAN)      = %d\n", isgreaterequal(1.0,NAN));
 
    return 0;
}Possible output:
isgreaterequal(2.0,1.0) = 1 isgreaterequal(1.0,2.0) = 0 isgreaterequal(1.0,1.0) = 1 isgreaterequal(INFINITY,1.0) = 1 isgreaterequal(1.0,NAN) = 0
| (C99) | checks if the first floating-point argument is less or equal than the second (function macro) | 
| C++ documentation for isgreaterequal | |
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