[Numpy-discussion] What is the sign of nan?
David Cournapeau
david at ar.media.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Tue Sep 30 00:55:38 EDT 2008
Robert Kern wrote:
>
> numpy.signbit() should work like C99 signbit() (where possible), IMO.
> It can only return (integer) 0 or 1, and it does differentiate between
> NAN and -NAN. I don't think we should invent new semantics if we can
> avoid it.
Agreed, but for signbit case, I can't find what the semantic should be
for signbit and NANs; do you know any reference ? For example, going
into your example:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
printf("signbit(NAN) = %d\n", signbit(NAN));
printf("signbit(-NAN) = %d\n", signbit(-NAN));
printf("signbit((-1) * NAN) = %d\n", signbit((-1) * NAN));
printf("signbit(- NAN + NAN) = %d\n", signbit(-NAN + NAN));
printf("signbit(NAN - NAN) = %d\n", signbit(NAN - NAN));
return 0;
}
when run tells me:
signbit(NAN) = 0
signbit(-NAN) = -2147483648
signbit((-1) * NAN) = 0
signbit(- NAN + NAN) = -2147483648
signbit(NAN - NAN) = 0
Does not this indicate that signbit(NAN) is undefined ? I guess I am
afraid that the glibc NAN is just one type of NAN, and is not the
behavior of any NAN,
cheers,
David
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