- The signum(double num) is an inbuilt method of StrictMath class in Java which is used to get the signum method of the argument which means:
- The result is zero if the argument is zero.
- The result 1.0 when the argument is greater than zero.
- The result is -1.0 if the argument is less than zero.
Syntax :
public static double signum(double num)
Parameters : The method accepts a single parameter num of double type representing the parameter whose signum is to be returned.
Return Value : The method returns signum function of the argument num. It also gives rise to two different results:- The result is NaN when the first argument is NaN .
- The result is the same as the argument num when num is positive zero or negative zero.
Examples:
Input: num = 72.88d Output: 1.0 Input: num = -72.88d Output: -1.0 Input: num = 0.0d Output: 0.0
Below program illustrates the working of java.lang.StrictMath.signum(double) method.
// Java praogram to illustrate the
// java.lang.StrictMath.signum(double)
import
java.lang.*;
public
class
Geeks {
public
static
void
main(String[] args)
{
double
num1 =
46
.82d, num2 =
0
.0d, num3 = -
0
.0d, num4 = -
18
.2d;
// It returns 1.0 since the argument is greater than zero
double
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num1);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num2);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num3);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num4);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
}
}
Output:Signum Value = 1.0 Signum Value = 0.0 Signum Value = -0.0 Signum Value = -1.0
- The signum(float num) is an inbuilt method of StrictMath class in Java which is used to get the signum method of the argument which means:
- The result is zero if the argument is zero.
- The result 1.0 when the argument is greater than zero.
- The result is -1.0 if the argument is less than zero.
Syntax :
public static float signum(float num)
Parameters : The method accepts a single parameter num of float type representing the parameter whose signum is to be returned.
Return Value : The method returns signum function of the argument num. It also gives rise to two different results:
- The result is NaN when the first argument is NaN .
- The result is the same as the argument num when num is positive zero or negative zero.
Examples:
Input: num = 11.8f Output: 1.0 Input: num = -55.88f Output: -1.0 Input: num = 0.0f Output: 0.0
Below program illustrates the working of java.lang.StrictMath.signum(float) method:
// Java praogram to illustrate the
// java.lang.StrictMath.signum(float)
import
java.lang.*;
public
class
Geeks {
public
static
void
main(String[] args)
{
float
num1 =
7
.22f, num2 =
0
.0f, num3 = -
0
.0f, num4 = -
18
.11f;
// It returns 1.0 since the argument is greater than zero
float
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num1);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num2);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num3);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
sig_val = StrictMath.signum(num4);
System.out.println(
"Signum Value = "
+ sig_val);
}
}
Output:Signum Value = 1.0 Signum Value = 0.0 Signum Value = -0.0 Signum Value = -1.0