The standard C comparison operators provoke exceptions when one or other of the operands is NaN. For example,
int v = a < 1.0;
will raise an exception if a is NaN. (This does not
happen with == and !=; those merely return false and true,
respectively, when NaN is examined.) Frequently this exception is
undesirable. ISO C99 therefore defines comparison functions that
do not raise exceptions when NaN is examined. All of the functions are
implemented as macros which allow their arguments to be of any
floating-point type. The macros are guaranteed to evaluate their
arguments only once. TS 18661-1:2014 adds such a macro for an
equality comparison that does raise an exception for a NaN
argument; it also adds functions that provide a total ordering on all
floating-point values, including NaNs, without raising any exceptions
even for signaling NaNs.
int isgreater (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether the argument x is greater than
y. It is equivalent to (x) > (y), but no
exception is raised if x or y are NaN.
int isgreaterequal (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether the argument x is greater than or
equal to y. It is equivalent to (x) >= (y), but no
exception is raised if x or y are NaN.
int isless (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether the argument x is less than y.
It is equivalent to (x) < (y), but no exception is
raised if x or y are NaN.
int islessequal (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether the argument x is less than or equal
to y. It is equivalent to (x) <= (y), but no
exception is raised if x or y are NaN.
int islessgreater (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether the argument x is less or greater
than y. It is equivalent to (x) < (y) ||
(x) > (y) (although it only evaluates x and y
once), but no exception is raised if x or y are NaN.
This macro is not equivalent to x != y, because that
expression is true if x or y are NaN.
int isunordered (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether its arguments are unordered. In other words, it is true if x or y are NaN, and false otherwise.
int iseqsig (real-floating x, real-floating y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro determines whether its arguments are equal. It is
equivalent to (x) == (y), but it raises the invalid
exception and sets errno to EDOM if either argument is a
NaN.
int totalorder (const double *x, const double *y) ¶int totalorderf (const float *x, const float *y) ¶int totalorderl (const long double *x, const long double *y) ¶int totalorderfN (const _FloatN *x, const _FloatN *y) ¶int totalorderfNx (const _FloatNx *x, const _FloatNx *y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
These functions determine whether the total order relationship,
defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for *x and
*y, returning
nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false. No exceptions are
raised even for signaling NaNs. The relationship is true if they are
the same floating-point value (including sign for zero and NaNs, and
payload for NaNs), or if *x comes before *y
in the following
order: negative quiet NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative
signaling NaNs, in order of decreasing payload; negative infinity;
finite numbers, in ascending order, with negative zero before positive
zero; positive infinity; positive signaling NaNs, in order of
increasing payload; positive quiet NaNs, in order of increasing
payload.
int totalordermag (const double *x, const double *y) ¶int totalordermagf (const float *x, const float *y) ¶int totalordermagl (const long double *x, const long double *y) ¶int totalordermagfN (const _FloatN *x, const _FloatN *y) ¶int totalordermagfNx (const _FloatNx *x, const _FloatNx *y) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
These functions determine whether the total order relationship,
defined in IEEE 754-2008, is true for the absolute values of *x
and *y, returning nonzero if it is true and zero if it is false.
No exceptions are raised even for signaling NaNs.
Not all machines provide hardware support for these operations. On machines that don’t, the macros can be very slow. Therefore, you should not use these functions when NaN is not a concern.
NB: There are no macros isequal or isunequal.
They are unnecessary, because the == and != operators do
not throw an exception if one or both of the operands are NaN.