Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/DCOSEC"

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==See Also==
 
==See Also==
  
*[[Manuals/calci/SEC | SEC]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/COSEC | COSEC]]
*[[Manuals/calci/SECH | SECH]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/COSECH | COSECH]]
*[[Manuals/calci/COS | COS]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/ACOSEC | ACOSEC]]
*[[Manuals/calci/ACOS | ACOS]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/SIN | SIN]]
*[[Manuals/calci/DCOS| DCOS]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/ASIN| ASIN]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigonometric_functions List of Trigonometric Functions]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigonometric_functions List of Trigonometric Functions]

Revision as of 04:19, 1 November 2013

DCOSEC(x)


  • where x is the angle in Radians
  • by default Calci use Radian as angle

COSEC can be used if the angle is in Radians.

Description

  • This function is used to obtain the Cosecant value of 'x' in degrees.
  • It is the reciprocal of SIN function i.e, COSEC(x) = 1 / SIN(x).
  • In a right angled triangle COSEC(x) = Hypotenuse / Opposite side.
  • To obtain the value in Radians multiply with PI()/180 or use COSEC function COSEC(X)
  • DCOSEC returns NaN if 'x' is not real

The angle can be a single value or any complex array of values.

The following example shows how DCOSEC is applied to an array of numbers containing numbers 1..10.

  • Type =1..10@DCOSEC in Calci
  • Type =1..10@DCOSEC or 1..10@DCOSEC in ZOS
Number DCOSEC
1 57.2986884985501
2 28.65370835
3 19.10732261
4 14.33558703
5 11.47371325
6 9.566772234
7 8.205509048
8 7.185296534
9 6.392453221
10 5.758770483

Examples

DCOSEC(x)

  • x   is the angle in Radians.
  • Result shows DCOSEC(abc)= NAN
DCOSEC(Radian) Value
DCOSEC(0) infinity
DCOSEC(1) 57.298688498550185
DCOSEC(90) 1

See Also

References