Question

I have two questions regarding ceil() function..

  1. The ceil() function is implemented in C. If I use ceil(3/2), it works fine. But when I use ceil(count/2), if value of count is 3, then it gives compile time error.

    /tmp/ccA4Yj7p.o(.text+0x364): In function FrontBackSplit': : undefined reference toceil' collect2: ld returned 1 exit status

    How to use the ceil function in second case? Please suggest.

  2. How can I implement my own ceil function in C. Please give some basic guidelines.

Thanks.

Was it helpful?

Solution

The ceil() function is implemented in the math library, libm.so. By default, the linker does not link against this library when invoked via the gcc frontend. To link against that library, pass -lm on the command line to gcc:

gcc main.c -lm

OTHER TIPS

Try this out:

#define CEILING_POS(X) ((X-(int)(X)) > 0 ? (int)(X+1) : (int)(X))
#define CEILING_NEG(X) ((X-(int)(X)) < 0 ? (int)(X-1) : (int)(X))
#define CEILING(X) ( ((X) > 0) ? CEILING_POS(X) : CEILING_NEG(X) )

Check out the link for comments, proof and discussion: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/programming-9/ceiling-function-c-programming-637404/

The prototype of the ceil function is:

double ceil(double)

My guess is that the type of your variable count is not of type double. To use ceil in C, you would write:

#include <math.h>
// ...
double count = 3.0;
double result = ceil(count/2.0);

In C++, you can use std::ceil from <cmath>; std::ceil is overloaded to support multiple types:

#include <cmath>
// ...
double count = 3.0;
double result = std::ceil(count/2.0);
double ceil (double x) {
    if (x > LONG_MAX) return x; // big floats are all ints
    return ((long)(x+(0.99999999999999997)));
}
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top