function
<cfenv>
feraiseexcept
int feraiseexcept (int excepts);
Raise floating-point exception
Attempts to raise the floating-point exceptions specified by excepts.
If more than one exception is specified, the order in which they are raised is unspecified.
Programs calling this function shall ensure that pragma FENV_ACCESS is enabled for the call.
Parameters
- excepts
- Bitmask value: A combination (with bitwise OR) of any number of floating-point exception values supported by the implementation:
macro value | description |
FE_DIVBYZERO | Pole error: division by zero, or some other asymptotically infinite result (from finite arguments). |
FE_INEXACT | Inexact: the result is not exact. |
FE_INVALID | Domain error: At least one of the arguments is a value for which the function is not defined. |
FE_OVERFLOW | Overflow range error: The result is too large in magnitude to be represented as a value of the return type. |
FE_UNDERFLOW | Underflow range error: The result is too small in magnitude to be represented as a value of the return type. |
FE_ALL_EXCEPT | All exceptions (selects all of the exceptions supported by the implementation). |
Certain library implementations may support additional floating-point exception values (with their corresponding macros also beginning with FE_
).
Libraries may define in
<fenv.h>
only the macro values above they support (the others may not be defined).
At least all of the above macro values are defined in
<cfenv>
(even if not supported by the implementation).
Return Value
Zero, if all exceptions in excepts were successfully raised (or if excepts was zero).
A non-zero value otherwise.
Example
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
|
/* feraiseexcept example */
#include <stdio.h> /* printf */
#include <fenv.h> /* feraiseexcept, fetestexcept, FE_ALL_EXCEPT, FE_INVALID */
#pragma STDC FENV_ACCESS on
double fn (double x) { /* some function for which zero is a domain error */
if (x==0.0) feraiseexcept(FE_INVALID);
return x;
}
int main ()
{
feclearexcept (FE_ALL_EXCEPT);
fn (0.0);
if (fetestexcept(FE_INVALID)) printf ("FE_INVALID raised\n");
return 0;
}
|
Possible output:
Data races
Each thread maintains a separate floating-point environment with its own state. Spawning a new thread copies the current state. [This applies to C11 and C++11 implementations]
Exceptions
No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions.
Note that C floating-point exceptions are not C++ exceptions, and thus are not caught by try/catch
blocks.