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author | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1999-06-30 17:16:08 +0000 |
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committer | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1999-06-30 17:16:08 +0000 |
commit | 0ea5db4f1f55e55942f6afd0e4e69ceb2163ed25 (patch) | |
tree | a3427369d6193a9618eb9a0c7078a0832210c282 /manual/arith.texi | |
parent | 16848c985d9e4d6f8ca7a9c2c4ac711ef63835ec (diff) | |
download | glibc-0ea5db4f1f55e55942f6afd0e4e69ceb2163ed25.tar.gz glibc-0ea5db4f1f55e55942f6afd0e4e69ceb2163ed25.tar.xz glibc-0ea5db4f1f55e55942f6afd0e4e69ceb2163ed25.zip |
Update.
1999-06-28 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de> * inet/rcmd.c (__icheckhost): Test for gethostbyname_r result correctly. 1999-06-25 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de> * manual/arith.texi (System V Number Conversion): Fix the description which confused pointer and value to pointer. Reported by Andries.Brouwer@cwi.nl. 1999-06-28 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de> * pwd/getpw.c (__getpw): Check for NULL result pointer. 1999-06-29 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de> * manual/users.texi (Lookup User): Document POSIX return semantics for getpwuid_r and getgrgid_r. * manual/socket.texi (Host Names): Document that the result pointer is null in case of error or host not found and fix a typo. Give a small example.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/arith.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/arith.texi | 28 |
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/manual/arith.texi b/manual/arith.texi index 7879a77b7c..1a24beb7ca 100644 --- a/manual/arith.texi +++ b/manual/arith.texi @@ -2191,13 +2191,13 @@ All these functions are defined in @file{stdlib.h}. @comment SVID, Unix98 @deftypefun {char *} ecvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}) The function @code{ecvt} converts the floating-point number @var{value} -to a string with at most @var{ndigit} decimal digits. -The returned string contains no decimal point or sign. The first -digit of the string is non-zero (unless @var{value} is actually zero) -and the last digit is rounded to nearest. @var{decpt} is set to the +to a string with at most @var{ndigit} decimal digits. The +returned string contains no decimal point or sign. The first digit of +the string is non-zero (unless @var{value} is actually zero) and the +last digit is rounded to nearest. @code{*@var{decpt}} is set to the index in the string of the first digit after the decimal point. -@var{neg} is set to a nonzero value if @var{value} is negative, zero -otherwise. +@code{*@var{neg}} is set to a nonzero value if @var{value} is negative, +zero otherwise. If @var{ndigit} decimal digits would exceed the precision of a @code{double} it is reduced to a system-specific value. @@ -2205,16 +2205,16 @@ If @var{ndigit} decimal digits would exceed the precision of a The returned string is statically allocated and overwritten by each call to @code{ecvt}. -If @var{value} is zero, it's implementation defined whether @var{decpt} is -@code{0} or @code{1}. +If @var{value} is zero, it is implementation defined whether +@code{*@var{decpt}} is @code{0} or @code{1}. -For example: @code{ecvt (12.3, 5, &decpt, &neg)} returns @code{"12300"} -and sets @var{decpt} to @code{2} and @var{neg} to @code{0}. +For example: @code{ecvt (12.3, 5, &d, &n)} returns @code{"12300"} +and sets @var{d} to @code{2} and @var{n} to @code{0}. @end deftypefun @comment stdlib.h @comment SVID, Unix98 -@deftypefun {char *} fcvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int @var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}) +@deftypefun {char *} fcvt (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}) The function @code{fcvt} is like @code{ecvt}, but @var{ndigit} specifies the number of digits after the decimal point. If @var{ndigit} is less than zero, @var{value} is rounded to the @math{@var{ndigit}+1}'th place to the @@ -2254,7 +2254,7 @@ restricted by the precision of a @code{long double}. @comment stdlib.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun {char *} qfcvt (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int @var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}) +@deftypefun {char *} qfcvt (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}) This function is equivalent to @code{fcvt} except that it takes a @code{long double} for the first parameter and that @var{ndigit} is restricted by the precision of a @code{long double}. @@ -2292,7 +2292,7 @@ This function is a GNU extension. @comment stdlib.h @comment SVID, Unix98 -@deftypefun {char *} fcvt_r (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int @var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len}) +@deftypefun {char *} fcvt_r (double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len}) The @code{fcvt_r} function is the same as @code{fcvt}, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by @var{buf}, with length @var{len}. @@ -2312,7 +2312,7 @@ This function is a GNU extension. @comment stdlib.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun {char *} qfcvt_r (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int @var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len}) +@deftypefun {char *} qfcvt_r (long double @var{value}, int @var{ndigit}, int *@var{decpt}, int *@var{neg}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{len}) The @code{qfcvt_r} function is the same as @code{qfcvt}, except that it places its result into the user-specified buffer pointed to by @var{buf}, with length @var{len}. |