LabVIEW Wiki Home
Menu
Navigation

. Home
. Contents
. Recent changes
. Random page
. Help
. Donations

Toolbox

. What links here
. Related changes
. Upload file
. Special pages
. Printable version
. Permanent link










> NaN

NaN is the notation in LabVIEW for the floating-point value Not-a-Number. LabVIEW implements the IEEE-754 standard for floating-point calculations, which specifies unique values for the outputs of mathematical operations which have no meaningful numerical result. A few examples of calculations which produce NaN are:

  • division of zero by zero
  • square root of a negative number
  • division of an infinity by an infinity
  • logarithm (any base) of a non-positive number
  • any calculation which includes NaN as one of its operands

The last example above implies that any calculation sequence which generates NaN as an intermediate step will propagate NaN through all subsequent calculations. While this is generally true, there are exceptions (the LabVIEW Power of X primitive returns one for zero raised to NaN).

Another salient feature of the NaN value is that all comparison operations involving NaN return FALSE, including the equality operator (in other words, NaN != NaN). LabVIEW provides the Not A Number/Path/Refnum? primitive, which is the proper way to test for NaN.

Not A Number/Path/Refnum?
primitive

Floating-point controls, indicators, and block diagram constants support the direct entry of NaN (case-insensitive). Similarly, string-to-numeric and numeric-to-string primitives convert or format NaN without regard to format specifiers.

External links

Retrieved from "http://wiki.lavag.org/NaN"

Content is available under Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0  About LabVIEW Wiki  Disclaimers  LabVIEW™ is a Trademark of National Instruments Corp.
Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0
IpbWikiPowered by MediaWiki
Powered by WebRing.