Return the maximum value.
var maxn = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/maxn' );
Returns the maximum value.
var v = maxn( 4.2, 3.14 );
// returns 4.2
v = maxn( +0.0, -0.0 );
// returns +0.0
v = maxn( 4.2, 3.14, -1.0, 6.8 );
// returns 6.8
If any argument is NaN
, the function returns NaN
.
var v = maxn( 4.2, NaN );
// returns NaN
v = maxn( NaN, 3.14 );
// returns NaN
If not provided any arguments, the function returns -infinity
.
var v = maxn();
// returns -Infinity
- When an empty set is considered a subset of the extended reals (all real numbers, including positive and negative infinity), negative infinity is the least upper bound. Similar to zero being the identity element for the sum of an empty set and to one being the identity element for the product of an empty set, negative infinity is the identity element for the maximum, and thus, the function returns
-infinity
.
var minstd = require( '@stdlib/random/base/minstd-shuffle' );
var maxn = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/maxn' );
var x;
var y;
var v;
var i;
for ( i = 0; i < 100; i++ ) {
x = minstd();
y = minstd();
v = maxn( x, y );
console.log( 'max(%d,%d) = %d', x, y, v );
}
@stdlib/math/base/special/max
: return the maximum value.@stdlib/math/base/special/maxabsn
: return the maximum absolute value.@stdlib/math/base/special/minn
: return the minimum value.