conjf, conj, conjl
From cppreference.com
C
Concurrency support (C11)
Complex number arithmetic
Types and the imaginary constant
Manipulation
Power and exponential functions
Trigonometric functions
Hyperbolic functions
Defined in header
<complex.h>
Defined in header
<tgmath.h>
#define conj( z )
(4)
(since C99)
4) Type-generic macro: if
z
has type long double complex , long double imaginary , or long double, conjl
is called. If z
has type float complex , float imaginary , or float, conjf
is called. If z
has type double complex , double imaginary , double, or any integer type, conj
is called.[edit] Parameters
z
-
complex argument
[edit] Return value
The complex conjugate of z
.
[edit] Notes
On C99 implementations that do not implement I as _Imaginary_I , conj
may be used to obtain complex numbers with negative zero imaginary part. In C11, the macro CMPLX is used for that purpose.
[edit] Example
Run this code
Output:
The conjugate of 1.0+2.0i is 1.0-2.0i Their product is 5.0+0.0i
[edit] References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.3.9.4 The conj functions (p: 198)
- 7.25 Type-generic math <tgmath.h> (p: 373-375)
- G.7 Type-generic math <tgmath.h> (p: 545)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 7.3.9.3 The conj functions (p: 179)
- 7.22 Type-generic math <tgmath.h> (p: 335-337)
- G.7 Type-generic math <tgmath.h> (p: 480)
[edit] See also
C++ documentation for conj