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rad2deg> <pi
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012

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pow

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

powPotęgowanie

Opis

number pow ( number $podstawa , number $wykładnik )

Zwraca argument podstawa podniesiony do potęgi wykładnik. Jeśli możliwe, funkcja zwróci typ integer.

Jeśli nie da się obliczyć potęgi, zostanie wyświetlone ostrzeżenie a funkcja pow() zwróci FALSE. Począwszy od PHP 4.2.0 pow() nie emituje żadnych ostrzeżeń.

Informacja:

PHP nie może cannot operować na ujemnej podstawies.

Przykład #1 Parę przykładów z pow()

<?php

var_dump
pow(2,8) ); // int(256)
echo pow(-1,20); // 1
echo pow(00); // 1

echo pow(-15.5); // błąd

?>
Ostrzeżenie

W PHP 4.0.6 i wcześniejszych funkcja pow() zawsze zwracała typ float i nie wyświetlała ostrzeżeń.

Patrz także: exp() sqrt(), bcpow() i gmp_pow(),



rad2deg> <pi
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes pow
chris at ocportal dot com 21-May-2012 04:05
Many notations use "^" as a power operator, but in PHP (and other C-based languages) that is actually the XOR operator. You need to use this 'pow' function, there is no power operator.

i.e. 3^2 means "3 XOR 2" not "3 squared".

It is particular confusing as when doing Pythagoras theorem in a 'closet points' algorithm using "^" you get results that look vaguely correct but with an error.
tagg_maiwald at yahoo dot com 02-Nov-2010 08:34
This function returns the value of a positive base with a signed floating point exponent:
function sf_exp( $fl_x = 1, $fl_y = 0)
{    $fl_exp = 0.0;
    if (0 > $fl_x)
    {    // Alter this logic container to enable processing of negative bases.
        $fl_exp = -1.0;
    } else
    {    $bool_neg = (0 > $fl_y);

        if ($bool_neg)
        {    $fl_y = 0 - $fl_y;
        }
   
        $fl_xlog = log10( $fl_x);
        $fl_xylog = ( $fl_xlog * $fl_y);
        $fl_exp = pow( 10, $fl_xylog);

        if ($bool_neg)
        {    $fl_exp = 1/$fl_exp;
        }
    }
   
    return $fl_exp;
}
Anonymous 25-Apr-2010 02:24
You can increase the 'precision' php.ini setting a little to work with larger float numbers here, but this comes at at cost of sacrificing decimal accuracy.  The default 'precision' is 14.  5 is about the threshhold that php can handle for decimal accuracy before at least some number corruption starts showing or it cannot output the actual number, and 16 for large number accuracy, as demonstrated by throwing this into the table below:
<?php
   
echo "<td>".pow(10, $i) - 1)."</td>";
?>

See the table below for an example, and adjust your php.ini 'precision' setting according to what your OS and PHP version can handle and what number size you want to work with.  Alternatively, you can use the bc math functions for more accuracy all around, and not have to rely on the 'precision' ini setting at all, but this moves out of the realm of strictly floats and into strings.

Also, PHP just prefers to display the 'E' notation of float values where possible after about 5 decimal places rather than the actual decimal number (1.0E-5 vs 0.00005).

<?php

echo "<table>";
for(
$i = 0; $i < 50; $i++) {
   
$precision = $i + 1;
   
ini_set('precision', $precision);
    echo
"<tr>";
    echo
"<td>".$precision."</td>";
    echo
"<td>".pow(10, $i)."</td>";
    echo
"<td>".pow(10, (-1 * $i))."</td>";
    echo
"<td>".bcpow('10', (string) $i, $precision)."</td>";
    echo
"<td>".bcpow('10', (string) (-1 * $i), $precision)."</td>";
    echo
"</tr>";
    }
echo
"</table>";

?>

Bottom line though is, if you're working with larger numbers or require very fine decimal precision or prefer displaying the full decimal number, use the bc math functions instead.  And, do check out PHP's considerations about the float type here: http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.float.php
Matt Dudley 16-Jul-2008 03:14
Calculate wind chill based on the National Weather Service formula.

$temp = 25;
$wind_speed_mph = 6;

$wind_chill = 35.74+(.6215*$temp_f)-(35.75*(pow($wind_speed_mph, 0.16)))+(.4275*$temp_f*(pow($wind_speed_mph, 0.16)));

Value only valid when the temp is 45 or below.... I used this with a weather script I wrote that reads an xml file. They don't provide wind chill.
Docey 04-May-2007 10:33
no integer breaking here, pow just silently switches to using floats instead of integers.

pow(2, 31) = integer value
pow(2, 32) = float value.

the manual says the limit for floats is machine dependent so i did a little loop to see how far it will go before becomming infinit. the result is 1023.

pow(2, 1023) = float
pow(2, 1024) = ifinit.

tested on php 4.4.1 under windows2000 on an AMD AthlonXP 2800+.
gilthansREMOVEME at gmail dot com 15-Dec-2006 07:50
Note that pow(0, 0) equals to 1 on PHP 4 (only tested it there), although mathematically this is undefined.
moikboy (nospam) moikboy (nospam) hu 10-May-2006 01:27
Here is a function for calculating the $k-th root of $a :

<?php
function root($a,$k){return(($a<0&&$k%2>0)?-1:1)*pow(abs($a),1/$k);};
?>
louis [at] mulliemedia.com 31-Dec-2004 08:02
Here's a pow() function that allows negative bases :
<?php
function npow($base, $exp)
{
   
$result = pow(abs($base), $exp);
    if (
$exp % 2 !== 0) {
       
$result = - ($result);
    }
    return
$result;
}
?>
janklopper .AT. gmail dot.com 10-Nov-2004 06:26
since pow doesn't support decimal powers, you can use a different sollution,

thanks to dOt for doing the math!

a^b = e^(b log a)
which is no the 10log but the e-log (aka "ln")

so instead of: pow( $a , 0.6 ) use something like: exp( 0.6 * log($a) )
matthew underscore kay at ml1 dot net 17-Mar-2004 11:03
As of PHP5beta4, pow() with negative bases appears to work correctly and without errors (from a few cursory tests):

pow(-3, 3) = -27
pow(-3, 2) = 9
pow(-5, -1) = -0.2
bishop 17-Jul-2003 08:01
A couple of points on pow():
1. One of the official examples of pow(2,8) is not pragmatic; use 1 << 8 as it's substantially faster
2. When passing variables to pow(), cast them otherwise you might get warnings on some versions of PHP
3. All the rules of algebra apply: b**(-e) is 1/(b**e), b**(p/q) is the qth root of b**p

So, e.g., sqrt($x) === pow($x, .5); but sqrt() is faster.

 
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