Mastering the asin() Method in Java: A Complete Tutorial
Table of Content:
Description
On this document we will be showing a java example on how to use the asin(double a) method of Math Class. The asin(double a) returns the arc sine of the method argument value. The returned angle is in the range -pi/2 through pi/2. The following rule must be noted
- If the argument is NaN or its absolute value is greater than 1, then the result is NaN.
- If the argument is zero, then the result is a zero with the same sign as the argument.
The arc sine of value is basically just the inverse sine of a value. To further illustrate this below is the equation.
asin(a) = sin-1a
Most of the methods of the Math class is static and the asin() method is no exception. Thus don’t forget that in order to call this method, you don’t have to create a new object. Use the method in the format Math.asin(a).
The method returns the arcsine of the specified double value.
Syntax
double asin(double d)
Parameters
Here is the detail of parameters ?
-
d ? A double data types.
Return Value
-
This method returns the arcsine of the specified double value.
Example
public class MathaSin { public static void main(String args[]) { double degrees = 45.0; double radians = Math.toRadians(degrees); System.out.format("The value of pi is %.4f%n", Math.PI); System.out.format("The arcsine of %.4f is %.4f degrees %n", Math.sin(radians), Math.toDegrees(Math.asin(Math.sin(radians)))); } }
Output
The value of pi is 3.1416 The arcsine of 0.7071 is 45.0000 degrees Press any key to continue . . .
Example
Below is a java code demonstrates the use of asin() method of Math class. The example presented might be simple however it shows the behavior of the asin() method.
import java.util.Scanner; /* * This example source code demonstrates the use of * asin() method of Math class */ public class MathAsinExample { public static void main(String[] args) { // Ask for user input System.out.print("Enter a value:"); // use scanner to read the console input Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in); // Assign the user to String variable String s = scan.nextLine(); // close the scanner object scan.close(); // get the arc sine value of the user input double asinValue = Math.asin(Double.parseDouble(s)); System.out.println("arc sine of " + s + " is " + asinValue); } }
Output
Enter a value:.25 arc sine of .25 is 0.25268025514207865 Press any key to continue . . .
The above java example source code demonstrates the use of asin() method of Math class. We simply ask for user input and we use the Scanner class to parse it. Since we have used the nextLine() method to get the console value, and the return data type is String thus we have used the Double.parseDouble() to transform it into double. We have to convert it first to double because the asin() method accepts double method argument.