std::isfinite
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    |   Defined in header  <cmath>
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| (1) | ||
bool isfinite( float num ); bool isfinite( double num );  | 
(since C++11)  (until C++23)  | 
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|   constexpr bool isfinite( /*floating-point-type*/ num );  | 
(since C++23) | |
|   SIMD overload (since C++26)  | 
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|   Defined in header  <simd>
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|   template< /*math-floating-point*/ V > constexpr typename /*deduced-simd-t*/<V>::mask_type  | 
(S) | (since C++26) | 
|   Defined in header  <cmath>
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|   template< class Integer > bool isfinite( Integer num );  | 
(A) |  (since C++11)  (constexpr since C++23)  | 
1) Determines if the given floating point number num has finite value i.e. it is normal, subnormal or zero, but not infinite or NaN. The library provides overloads for all cv-unqualified floating-point types as the type of the parameter num.(since C++23)
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 S) The SIMD overload performs an element-wise  
std::isfinite on v_num.
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(since C++26) | 
A) Additional overloads are provided for all integer types, which are treated as double.
Parameters
| num | - | floating-point or integer value | 
| v_num | - | a data-parallel object of std::basic_simd specialization where its element type is a floating-point type | 
Return value
1) true if num has finite value, false otherwise.
S) A data-parallel mask object where the ith element equals true if v_num[i] has finite value or false otherwise for all i in the range 
[0, v_num.size()).Notes
The additional overloads are not required to be provided exactly as (A). They only need to be sufficient to ensure that for their argument num of integer type, std::isfinite(num) has the same effect as std::isfinite(static_cast<double>(num)).
Examples
Run this code
#include <cfloat> #include <cmath> #include <iostream> int main() { std::cout << std::boolalpha << "isfinite(NaN) = " << std::isfinite(NAN) << '\n' << "isfinite(Inf) = " << std::isfinite(INFINITY) << '\n' << "isfinite(-Inf) = " << std::isfinite(-INFINITY) << '\n' << "isfinite(HUGE_VAL) = " << std::isfinite(HUGE_VAL) << '\n' << "isfinite(0.0) = " << std::isfinite(0.0) << '\n' << "isfinite(exp(800)) = " << std::isfinite(std::exp(800)) << '\n' << "isfinite(DBL_MIN/2.0) = " << std::isfinite(DBL_MIN / 2.0) << '\n'; }
Output:
isfinite(NaN) = false isfinite(Inf) = false isfinite(-Inf) = false isfinite(HUGE_VAL) = false isfinite(0.0) = true isfinite(exp(800)) = false isfinite(DBL_MIN/2.0) = true
See also
|    (C++11)  | 
  categorizes the given floating-point value  (function)  | 
|    (C++11)  | 
  checks if the given number is infinite  (function)  | 
|    (C++11)  | 
  checks if the given number is NaN  (function)  | 
|    (C++11)  | 
  checks if the given number is normal  (function)  | 
|   C documentation for isfinite 
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