- Scilab Help
 - Elementary Functions
 - Trigonometry
 - acos
 - acosd
 - acosh
 - acoshm
 - acosm
 - acot
 - acotd
 - acoth
 - acsc
 - acscd
 - acsch
 - asec
 - asecd
 - asech
 - asin
 - asind
 - asinh
 - asinhm
 - asinm
 - atan
 - atand
 - atanh
 - atanhm
 - atanm
 - cos
 - cosd
 - cosh
 - coshm
 - cosm
 - cotd
 - cotg
 - coth
 - cothm
 - csc
 - cscd
 - csch
 - csgn
 - sec
 - secd
 - sech
 - sin
 - sinc
 - sind
 - sinh
 - sinhm
 - sinm
 - tan
 - tand
 - tanh
 - tanhm
 - tanm
 
Please note that the recommended version of Scilab is 2026.0.0. This page might be outdated.
See the recommended documentation of this function
atan
2-quadrant and 4-quadrant inverse tangent
Syntax
phi = atan(x) phi = atan(y, x)
Arguments
- x
 a real or complex scalar, vector or matrix.
- phi
 a real or complex scalar, vector or matrix.
- x, y
 a real scalars, vectors or matrices of the same size.
- phi
 a real scalar, vector or matrix.
Description
The first form computes the 2-quadrant inverse tangent, which is the
            inverse of tan(phi). For real x,
            phi is in the interval 
. For complex
            x, atan has two singular, branching
            points +%i, -%i and the chosen branch
            cuts are the two imaginary half-straight lines 
 and 
.
The second form computes the 4-quadrant arctangent (atan2 in
            Fortran), this is, it returns the argument (angle) of the complex number
            x+i*y. The range of atan(y, x) is
            
.
For real arguments, both forms yield identical values if
            x>0.
In case of vector or matrix arguments, the evaluation is done
            element-wise, so that phi is a vector or matrix of the
            same size with phi(i, j) = atan(x(i, j)) or
            phi(i,j) = atan(y(i, j), x(i, j)).
Examples
See also
| Report an issue | ||
| << asinm | Trigonometry | atand >> |