This function is defined in <cmath> header file.
[Mathematics] sin-1x = asin(x) [In C++ Programming];
asin() prototype [As of C++ 11 standard]
double asin(double x); float asin(float x); long double asin(long double x); double asin (T x);
asin() Parameters
The asin() function takes a single mandatory argument in the range [-1, 1].
It is because the value of sine is in the range of 1 and -1.
asin() Return value
Given that the argument is in the range [-1, 1], the asin() function returns the value in the range of [-π/2, π/2].
If the argument is greater than 1 or less than -1, asin() returns NaN
i.e. not a number.
Parameter (x) | Return Value |
---|---|
x = [-1, 1] | [-π/, π/2] in radians |
-1 > x or x > 1 | NaN (Not a Number) |
Example 1: How asin() works?
#include <iostream>
#include <cmath>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
double x = 0.25, result;
result = asin(x);
cout << "asin(x) = " << result << " radians" << endl;
// result in degrees
cout << "asin(x) = " << result*180/3.1415 << " degrees" << endl;
return 0;
}
When you run the program, the output will be:
asin(x) = 0.25268 radians asin(x) = 14.4779 degrees
Example 2: asin() function with integral type
#include <iostream>
#include <cmath>
#define PI 3.141592654
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int x = 1;
double result;
result = asin(x);
cout << "asin(x) = " << result << " radians" << endl;
// Converting result to degrees
cout << "asin(x) = " << result*180/PI << " degrees";
return 0;
}
When you run the program, the output will be:
asin(x) = 1.5708 radians asin(x) = 90 degrees