Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/ACOS"

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==See Also==
 
==See Also==
  
*[[Manuals/calci/DTAN | DTAN]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/COS | COS]]
  
*[[Manuals/calci/ATAN | ATAN]]
+
*[[Manuals/calci/DCOS | DCOS]]
 +
 
 +
*[[Manuals/calci/COSH | COSH]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 04:29, 4 November 2013

ACOS(x)


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

ACOS can be used if the angle is in degrees.

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

For example ACOS(1..100) can give an array of the results, which is the ACOS value for each of the elements in the array. The array could be of any shape.

Description

Consider     x = 90    then     =TAN(RADIANS(90))    gives    1
This function is the inverse function of cos in trignometry,and also it is called as cyclometric function.ACOS is described as arcCOS and denoted by cos-1 (x).In ACOS(X) ,x value should be with in -1&1.Here x is in radians. To convert a degree value to radian, multiply 'x' with PI()/180 or use the radians function RADIANS(X)


Number ACOS
0.8 0.64350110879
-0.22 1.792610797291
0.2 1.567305661202

Examples

ACOS(x)

  • x   is the angle in radians.
TAN(Radian) Value
ACOS(0) 0
ACOS(1) 1.55740772465
ACOS(90) -1.99520041221

See Also

References