StrictMath.NextUp Method
Definition
Important
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Overloads
NextUp(Double) |
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to |
NextUp(Single) |
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to |
NextUp(Double)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to d
in
the direction of positive infinity.
[Android.Runtime.Register("nextUp", "(D)D", "")]
public static double NextUp (double d);
[<Android.Runtime.Register("nextUp", "(D)D", "")>]
static member NextUp : double -> double
Parameters
- d
- Double
starting floating-point value
Returns
The adjacent floating-point value closer to positive infinity.
- Attributes
Remarks
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to d
in the direction of positive infinity. This method is semantically equivalent to nextAfter(d, Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY)
; however, a nextUp
implementation may run faster than its equivalent nextAfter
call.
Special Cases: <ul> <li> If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
<li> If the argument is positive infinity, the result is positive infinity.
<li> If the argument is zero, the result is Double#MIN_VALUE
</ul>
Added in 1.6.
Java documentation for java.lang.StrictMath.nextUp(double)
.
Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by the Android Open Source Project and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 2.5 Attribution License.
Applies to
NextUp(Single)
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to f
in
the direction of positive infinity.
[Android.Runtime.Register("nextUp", "(F)F", "")]
public static float NextUp (float f);
[<Android.Runtime.Register("nextUp", "(F)F", "")>]
static member NextUp : single -> single
Parameters
- f
- Single
starting floating-point value
Returns
The adjacent floating-point value closer to positive infinity.
- Attributes
Remarks
Returns the floating-point value adjacent to f
in the direction of positive infinity. This method is semantically equivalent to nextAfter(f, Float.POSITIVE_INFINITY)
; however, a nextUp
implementation may run faster than its equivalent nextAfter
call.
Special Cases: <ul> <li> If the argument is NaN, the result is NaN.
<li> If the argument is positive infinity, the result is positive infinity.
<li> If the argument is zero, the result is Float#MIN_VALUE
</ul>
Added in 1.6.
Java documentation for java.lang.StrictMath.nextUp(float)
.
Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by the Android Open Source Project and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 2.5 Attribution License.