The atanh()
function takes a single argument (-1 ≤ x ≥ 1), and returns the arc hyperbolic tangent in radians.
The atanh()
function is included in <math.h>
header file.
atanh() Prototype
double atanh(double x);
To find arc hyperbolic tangent of type int
, float
or long double
, you can explicitly convert the type to double
using cast operator.
int x = 0; double result; result = atanh(double(x));
Also, two functions atanhf() and atanhl() were introduced in C99 to work specifically with type float
and long double
respectively.
float atanhf(float x); long double atanhl(long double x);
atanh() Parameter
The atanh()
function takes a single argument greater than or equal to -1 and less than or equal to 1.
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
double value | Required. A double value greater than or equal to 1 (-1 ≤ x ≥ 1). |
Example 1: atanh() function with different parameters
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
int main()
{
// constant PI is defined
const double PI = 3.1415926;
double x, result;
x = -0.5;
result = atanh(x);
printf("atanh(%.2f) = %.2lf in radians\n", x, result);
// converting radians to degree
result = atanh(x)*180/PI;
printf("atanh(%.2f) = %.2lf in degrees\n", x, result);
// parameter not in range
x = 3;
result = atanh(x);
printf("atanh(%.2f) = %.2lf", x, result);
return 0;
}
Output
atanh(-0.50) = -0.55 in radians atanh(-0.50) = -31.47 in degrees atanh(3.00) = nan