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cimag

Obtains the imaginary part of a complex number

#include <complex.h>
double cimag( double complex z );
float cimagf( float complex z );
long double cimagl( long double complex z );

A complex number is represented as two floating-point numbers, one quantifying the real part and one quantifying the imaginary part. The cimag( ) function returns the floating-point number that represents the imaginary part of the complex argument.

Example

double complex z = 4.5 - 6.7 * I;

printf( "The complex variable z is equal to %.2f %+.2f \xD7 I.\n",
        creal(z), cimag(z) );

This code produces the following output:

The complex variable z is equal to 4.50 -6.70 x I.

See Also

cabs( ), creal( ), carg( ), conj( ), cproj( )


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