@@ -15,11 +15,27 @@ the function is then applied to the result of the conversion.
1515
1616.. note ::
1717
18- On platforms with hardware and system-level support for signed
19- zeros, functions involving branch cuts are continuous on *both *
20- sides of the branch cut: the sign of the zero distinguishes one
21- side of the branch cut from the other. On platforms that do not
22- support signed zeros the continuity is as specified below.
18+ For functions involving branch cuts, we have the problem of deciding how to
19+ define those functions on the cut itself. Following Kahan's "Branch cuts for
20+ complex elementary functions" paper, as well as Annex G of C99 and later C
21+ standards, we use the sign of zero to distinguish one side of the branch cut
22+ from the other: for a branch cut along (a portion of) the real axis we look
23+ at the sign of the imaginary part, while for a branch cut along the
24+ imaginary axis we look at the sign of the real part.
25+
26+ For example, the :func: `cmath.sqrt ` function has a branch cut along the
27+ negative real axis. An argument of ``complex(-2.0, -0.0) `` is treated as
28+ though it lies *below * the branch cut, and so gives a result on the negative
29+ imaginary axis::
30+
31+ >>> cmath.sqrt(complex(-2.0, -0.0))
32+ -1.4142135623730951j
33+
34+ But an argument of ``complex(-2.0, 0.0) `` is treated as though it lies above
35+ the branch cut::
36+
37+ >>> cmath.sqrt(complex(-2.0, 0.0))
38+ 1.4142135623730951j
2339
2440
2541Conversions to and from polar coordinates
@@ -44,14 +60,11 @@ rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates and back.
4460
4561.. function :: phase(x)
4662
47- Return the phase of *x * (also known as the *argument * of *x *), as a
48- float. ``phase(x) `` is equivalent to ``math.atan2(x.imag,
49- x.real) ``. The result lies in the range [-\ *π *, *π *], and the branch
50- cut for this operation lies along the negative real axis,
51- continuous from above. On systems with support for signed zeros
52- (which includes most systems in current use), this means that the
53- sign of the result is the same as the sign of ``x.imag ``, even when
54- ``x.imag `` is zero::
63+ Return the phase of *x * (also known as the *argument * of *x *), as a float.
64+ ``phase(x) `` is equivalent to ``math.atan2(x.imag, x.real) ``. The result
65+ lies in the range [-\ *π *, *π *], and the branch cut for this operation lies
66+ along the negative real axis. The sign of the result is the same as the
67+ sign of ``x.imag ``, even when ``x.imag `` is zero::
5568
5669 >>> phase(complex(-1.0, 0.0))
5770 3.141592653589793
@@ -92,8 +105,8 @@ Power and logarithmic functions
92105.. function :: log(x[, base])
93106
94107 Returns the logarithm of *x * to the given *base *. If the *base * is not
95- specified, returns the natural logarithm of *x *. There is one branch cut, from 0
96- along the negative real axis to -∞, continuous from above .
108+ specified, returns the natural logarithm of *x *. There is one branch cut,
109+ from 0 along the negative real axis to -∞.
97110
98111
99112.. function :: log10(x)
@@ -112,9 +125,9 @@ Trigonometric functions
112125
113126.. function :: acos(x)
114127
115- Return the arc cosine of *x *. There are two branch cuts: One extends right from
116- 1 along the real axis to ∞, continuous from below . The other extends left from
117- -1 along the real axis to -∞, continuous from above .
128+ Return the arc cosine of *x *. There are two branch cuts: One extends right
129+ from 1 along the real axis to ∞. The other extends left from -1 along the
130+ real axis to -∞.
118131
119132
120133.. function :: asin(x)
@@ -125,9 +138,8 @@ Trigonometric functions
125138.. function :: atan(x)
126139
127140 Return the arc tangent of *x *. There are two branch cuts: One extends from
128- ``1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``∞j ``, continuous from the right. The
129- other extends from ``-1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``-∞j ``, continuous
130- from the left.
141+ ``1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``∞j ``. The other extends from ``-1j ``
142+ along the imaginary axis to ``-∞j ``.
131143
132144
133145.. function :: cos(x)
@@ -151,23 +163,21 @@ Hyperbolic functions
151163.. function :: acosh(x)
152164
153165 Return the inverse hyperbolic cosine of *x *. There is one branch cut,
154- extending left from 1 along the real axis to -∞, continuous from above .
166+ extending left from 1 along the real axis to -∞.
155167
156168
157169.. function :: asinh(x)
158170
159171 Return the inverse hyperbolic sine of *x *. There are two branch cuts:
160- One extends from ``1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``∞j ``,
161- continuous from the right. The other extends from ``-1j `` along
162- the imaginary axis to ``-∞j ``, continuous from the left.
172+ One extends from ``1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``∞j ``. The other
173+ extends from ``-1j `` along the imaginary axis to ``-∞j ``.
163174
164175
165176.. function :: atanh(x)
166177
167178 Return the inverse hyperbolic tangent of *x *. There are two branch cuts: One
168- extends from ``1 `` along the real axis to ``∞ ``, continuous from below. The
169- other extends from ``-1 `` along the real axis to ``-∞ ``, continuous from
170- above.
179+ extends from ``1 `` along the real axis to ``∞ ``. The other extends from
180+ ``-1 `` along the real axis to ``-∞ ``.
171181
172182
173183.. function :: cosh(x)
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