abs
number => absolute-value
number---a number.
absolute-value---a non-negative real.
abs returns the absolute value of number.
If number is
a real,
the result is of the same type as number.
If number is a complex, the result is a positive
real
with the same magnitude as number. The result can be a float
[Reviewer Note by Barmar: Single-float.] even if number's components are rationals and an exact rational result would have been possible. Thus the result of (abs #c(3 4)) can be either 5 or 5.0, depending on the implementation.
(abs 0) => 0 (abs 12/13) => 12/13 (abs -1.09) => 1.09 (abs #c(5.0 -5.0)) => 7.071068 (abs #c(5 5)) => 7.071068 (abs #c(3/5 4/5)) => 1 or approximately 1.0 (eql (abs -0.0) -0.0) => true
section Rule of Float Substitutability
If number is a complex, the result is equivalent to the following:
(sqrt (+ (expt (realpart number) 2) (expt (imagpart number) 2)))
An implementation should not use this formula directly for all complexes but should handle very large or very small components specially to avoid intermediate overflow or underflow.
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