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ldexp

 

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The latest version of this topic can be found at ldexp.

Multiplies a floating-point number by an integral power of two.

Syntax

double ldexp(  
   double x,  
   int exp   
);  
float ldexp(  
   float x,  
   int exp  
);  // C++ only  
long double ldexp(  
   long double x,  
   int exp  
);  // C++ only   
float ldexpf(  
   float x,  
   int exp  
);   
long double ldexpl(  
   long double x,  
   int exp  
);   

Parameters

x
Floating-point value.

exp
Integer exponent.

Return Value

The ldexp function returns the value of x * 2exp if successful. On overflow, and depending on the sign of x, ldexp returns +/– HUGE_VAL; the errno value is set to ERANGE.

For more information about errno and possible error return values, see errno, _doserrno, _sys_errlist, and _sys_nerr.

Remarks

Because C++ allows overloading, you can call overloads of ldexp that take float or long double types. In a C program, ldexp always takes a double and an int and returns a double.

Requirements

Routine C header C++ header
ldexp, ldexpf, ldexpl <math.h> <cmath>

For compatibility information, see Compatibility.

Example

// crt_ldexp.c  
  
#include <math.h>  
#include <stdio.h>  
  
int main( void )  
{  
   double x = 4.0, y;  
   int p = 3;  
  
   y = ldexp( x, p );  
   printf( "%2.1f times two to the power of %d is %2.1f\n", x, p, y );  
}  

Output

4.0 times two to the power of 3 is 32.0  

.NET Framework Equivalent

System::Math::Pow

See Also

Floating-Point Support
frexp
modf, modff, modfl