The inverse of cos so that, if y=cos(x), then x=arccos(y).
Parameters:
xarray_like
x-coordinate on the unit circle.
For real arguments, the domain is [-1, 1].
outndarray, None, or tuple of ndarray and None, optional
A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have
a shape that the inputs broadcast to. If not provided or None,
a freshly-allocated array is returned. A tuple (possible only as a
keyword argument) must have length equal to the number of outputs.
wherearray_like, optional
This condition is broadcast over the input. At locations where the
condition is True, the out array will be set to the ufunc result.
Elsewhere, the out array will retain its original value.
Note that if an uninitialized out array is created via the default
out=None, locations within it where the condition is False will
remain uninitialized.
**kwargs
For other keyword-only arguments, see the
ufunc docs.
Returns:
anglendarray
The angle of the ray intersecting the unit circle at the given
x-coordinate in radians [0, pi].
This is a scalar if x is a scalar.
arccos is a multivalued function: for each x there are infinitely
many numbers z such that cos(z)=x. The convention is to return
the angle z whose real part lies in [0, pi].
For real-valued input data types, arccos always returns real output.
For each value that cannot be expressed as a real number or infinity,
it yields nan and sets the invalid floating point error flag.
For complex-valued input, arccos is a complex analytic function that
has branch cuts [-inf,-1] and [1, inf] and is continuous from
above on the former and from below on the latter.