Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/DCOS"
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==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
+ | *[[Manuals/calci/COS | COS]] | ||
+ | *[[Manuals/calci/ACOS | ACOS]] | ||
*[[Manuals/calci/SEC | SEC]] | *[[Manuals/calci/SEC | SEC]] | ||
*[[Manuals/calci/SECH | SECH]] | *[[Manuals/calci/SECH | SECH]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
==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 23:44, 3 November 2013
DCOS(x)
- where x is the angle in Radians
- by default Calci use Radian as angle
COS can be used if the angle is in Radians.
Description
- This function is used to obtain the COS value of 'x' in Degrees.
- It is the reciprocal of SEC function i.e, COS(x) = 1 / SEC(x).
- In a right angled triangle COS(x) = Adjacent side / Hypotenuse.
- To obtain the value in Radians multiply with PI()/180 or use COS function COS(X)
- DSEC 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 DSEC is applied to an array of numbers containing numbers 1..10.
- Type =1..10@DCOS in Calci
- Type =1..10@DCOS or 1..10@DCOS in ZOS
Number | DCOS |
---|---|
1 | 0.999847695 |
2 | 0.999390827 |
3 | 0.998629535 |
4 | 0.99756405 |
5 | 0.996194698 |
6 | 0.994521895 |
7 | 0.992546152 |
8 | 0.990268069 |
9 | 0.987688341 |
10 | 0.984807753 |
Examples
DCOS(x)
- x is the angle in radians.
- COS(-X)=COS(X)
- Result shows DCOS(abc)= NAN
DCOS(Radian) | Value |
DSEC(0) | 1 |
DCOS(1) | 0.999847695 |
DCOS(90) | 0 |