Definition
The log function computes the natural logarithm (base $e \approx 2.71828$) of a floating-point number. It is part of the C standard math library and implements IEEE 754 compliant logarithmic evaluation. Unlike log10 or log2, log exclusively calculates logarithms in base $e$, making it essential for continuous growth/decay models, entropy calculations, and mathematical transformations.
Syntax and Parameters
#include <math.h> double log(double x); float logf(float x); // C99 long double logl(long double x); // C99
| Parameter | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
x | Floating-point | The input value. Must be strictly greater than 0.0 for a finite real result |
Return Value and Special Cases
Returns $\ln(x)$ as a floating-point value. IEEE 754 and C standard define precise behavior for boundary conditions:
log(1.0)→0.0log(0.0)→-HUGE_VAL(negative infinity)log(x < 0)→NaN(domain error)log(+inf)→+inflog(NaN)→NaN- Error Reporting:
x < 0→errnoset toEDOMx == 0→errnoset toERANGE(pole error)
Code Examples
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <errno.h>
int main(void) {
// Basic usage
double val1 = log(2.718281828); // ≈ ln(e) = 1.0
double val2 = log(10.0); // ≈ 2.302585
double val3 = log(1.0); // 0.0
printf("ln(e): %.6f\n", val1);
printf("ln(10): %.6f\n", val2);
printf("ln(1): %.6f\n", val3);
// Error handling for invalid domain
errno = 0;
double invalid = log(-5.0);
if (errno == EDOM || isnan(invalid)) {
printf("Error: log of negative number is undefined in real space\n");
}
// Handling zero (pole error)
errno = 0;
double zero_case = log(0.0);
if (errno == ERANGE || isinf(zero_case)) {
printf("log(0) = -infinity\n");
}
return 0;
}
Rules and Constraints
- Domain Restriction: Defined only for $x > 0$. Negative inputs are mathematically undefined in real arithmetic and return
NaN. - Type Specificity: Implicit integer-to-double conversion occurs if integers are passed. Very large integers may lose precision before evaluation.
- Precision Limits: Results are accurate to within a few ULPs. Near $x = 1.0$, standard
logsuffers from catastrophic cancellation due to floating-point representation. math_errhandlingMacro: Determines whether errors are signaled viaerrno, floating-point exceptions, or both. Default behavior varies by implementation.
Best Practices
- Validate domain before calling:
if (x <= 0.0) { handle_error(); } - Use
log1p(x)for values near 1.0:log1p(y)computes $\ln(1 + y)$ accurately when $y \approx 0$. Avoidlog(1.0 + y)due to precision loss. - Prefer base-specific functions: Use
log2(x)orlog10(x)instead oflog(x) / log(base)for accuracy and performance. - Match precision: Use
logforloglwhen working withfloatorlong doubleto avoid silent conversions. - Check error states: Use
isnan(),isinf(), anderrnobefore propagating results to downstream calculations. - Document expected ranges: Logarithmic functions amplify numerical instability near boundaries. Clearly specify valid input domains.
Common Pitfalls
- 🔴 Confusing
logwithlog10:logis natural logarithm, not base 10. Misuse leads to incorrect scaling in scientific calculations. - 🔴 Ignoring domain errors: Passing
x <= 0silently producesNaNor-inf, corrupting entire mathematical pipelines. - 🔴 Precision loss near 1.0:
log(1.0000000000000002)may evaluate to0.0due to floating-point cancellation. Uselog1p()instead. - 🔴 Integer division in base conversion:
log(x) / log(2)with integer literals triggers integer division before conversion, yielding0or garbage. - 🔴 Missing math library: POSIX systems require
-lmduring compilation. Omission causesundefined reference to 'log'linker errors. - 🔴 Assuming exact inverses:
exp(log(x))rarely equalsxexactly due to rounding errors. Use tolerance-based comparisons for equality checks.
Performance and Alternatives
- Hardware Acceleration: Modern FPUs provide dedicated logarithmic instructions (e.g.,
fyl2xon x86).logtypically maps directly to these. log1p(x): Highly optimized for small $x$. Uses polynomial approximations that preserve significant digits lost in1.0 + x.- Base Conversion:
log2()andlog10()(C99) are faster and more accurate than manual division. - Approximation Tables: For embedded or real-time systems without FPU support, lookup tables with linear interpolation offer deterministic latency at the cost of memory.
- Vectorization: SIMD math libraries (Intel SVML, ARM Ne10, OpenLibm) provide batched
logevaluation for array processing.
Linking Requirements
On POSIX-compliant systems (Linux, macOS, Unix), mathematical functions reside in a separate library. Compile with:
gcc main.c -lm -o main
Windows MSVC and modern compilers with standard libraries often link math functions automatically, but explicit -lm remains required for cross-platform portability and strict standard compliance.
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