acos#
- ivy.acos(x, /, *, out=None)[source]#
Calculate an implementation-dependent approximation of the principal value of the inverse cosine, having domain [-1, +1] and codomain [+0, +π], for each element x_i of the input array x. Each element-wise result is expressed in radians.
Special cases
For floating-point operands,
If
x_iisNaN, the result isNaN.If
x_iis greater than1, the result isNaN.If
x_iis less than-1, the result isNaN.If
x_iis1, the result is+0.
For complex floating-point operands, let a = real(x_i) and b = imag(x_i), and
If
ais either+0or-0andbis+0, the result isπ/2 - 0j.if
ais either+0or-0andbisNaN, the result isπ/2 + NaN j.If
ais a finite number andbis+infinity, the result isπ/2 - infinity j.If
ais a nonzero finite number andbisNaN, the result isNaN + NaN j.If
ais-infinityandbis a positive (i.e., greater than 0) finite number, the result isπ - infinity j.If
ais+infinityandbis a positive (i.e., greater than 0) finite number, the result is+0 - infinity j.If
ais-infinityandbis+infinity, the result is3π/4 - infinity j.If
ais+infinityandbis+infinity, the result isπ/4 - infinity j.If
ais either+infinityor-infinityandbisNaN, the result isNaN ± infinity j(sign of the imaginary component is unspecified).If
aisNaNandbis a finite number, the result isNaN + NaN j.if
aisNaNandbis+infinity, the result isNaN - infinity j.If
aisNaNandbisNaN, the result isNaN + NaN j.
- Parameters:
- Return type:
- Returns:
ret – an array containing the inverse cosine of each element in x. The returned array must have a floating-point data type determined by type-promotion.
This function conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.
Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts
ivy.Containerinstances in place of any of the argumentsExamples
With
ivy.Arrayinput:>>> x = ivy.array([0., 1., -1.]) >>> y = ivy.acos(x) >>> print(y) ivy.array([1.57, 0. , 3.14])
>>> x = ivy.array([1., 0., -1.]) >>> y = ivy.zeros(3) >>> ivy.acos(x, out=y) >>> print(y) ivy.array([0. , 1.57, 3.14])
With
ivy.Containerinput:>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([0., -1, 1]), b=ivy.array([1., 0., -1])) >>> y = ivy.acos(x) >>> print(y) { a: ivy.array([1.57, 3.14, 0.]), b: ivy.array([0., 1.57, 3.14]) }
- Array.acos(self, *, out=None)[source]#
ivy.Array instance method variant of ivy.acos. This method simply wraps the function, and so the docstring for ivy.acos also applies to this method with minimal changes.
- Parameters:
self (
Array) – input array. Should have a real-valued floating-point data type.out (
Optional[Array], default:None) – optional output array, for writing the result to. It must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to.
- Return type:
Array- Returns:
ret – an array containing the inverse cosine of each element in
self. The returned array must have the same data type asself.
Examples
>>> x = ivy.array([1.0, 0.0, -0.9]) >>> y = x.acos() >>> print(y) ivy.array([0. , 1.57, 2.69])
- Container.acos(self, *, key_chains=None, to_apply=True, prune_unapplied=False, map_sequences=False, out=None)[source]#
ivy.Container instance method variant of ivy.acos. This method simply wraps the function, and so the docstring for ivy.acos also applies to this method with minimal changes.
- Parameters:
self (
Container) – input container. Should have a real-valued floating-point data type.key_chains (
Optional[Union[List[str],Dict[str,str],Container]], default:None) – The key-chains to apply or not apply the method to. Default isNone.to_apply (
Union[bool,Container], default:True) – If True, the method will be applied to key_chains, otherwise key_chains will be skipped. Default isTrue.prune_unapplied (
Union[bool,Container], default:False) – Whether to prune key_chains for which the function was not applied. Default isFalse.map_sequences (
Union[bool,Container], default:False) – Whether to also map method to sequences (lists, tuples). Default isFalse.out (
Optional[Container], default:None) – optional output container, for writing the result to. It must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to.
- Return type:
Container- Returns:
ret – a container containing the inverse cosine of each element in
self. The returned container must have a floating-point data type determined by type-promotion.
Examples
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([0., -1, 1]), b=ivy.array([1., 0., -1.])) >>> y = x.acos() >>> print(y) { a: ivy.array([1.57, 3.14, 0.]), b: ivy.array([0., 1.57, 3.14]) }