I have some code that will allow me to draw a crescent moon shape, and have extracted the values to excel to be drawn. However in place of some numbers, there is -1.#IND
in place. Firstly if anyone could explain what this means, as Google came back with 0 links. And secondly if there is anyway to stop it from occurring.
There is a brief analogy of my code. I have lots more code besides this, however that is just calculating angles.
for(int j=0; j<=n; j++)//calculation for angles and output displayed to user
{
Xnew2 = -j*(Y+R1)/n; //calculate x coordinate
Ynew2 = Y*(pow(1-(pow((Xnew2/X),2)),0.5));
if(abs(Ynew2) <= R1)
cout<<"\n("<<Xnew2<<", "<<Ynew2<<")"<<endl;
}
MORE INFO
I'm now having the problem with this code.
for(int i=0; i<=n; i++) //calculation for angles and output displayed to user
{
Xnew = -i*(Y+R1)/n; //calculate x coordinate
Ynew = pow((((Y+R1)*(Y+R1)) - (Xnew*Xnew)), 0.5); //calculate y coordinate
AND
for(int j=0; j<=n; j++)//calculation for angles and output displayed to user
{
Xnew2 = -j*(Y+R1)/((n)+((0.00001)*(n==0))); //calculate x coordinate
Ynew2 = Y*(pow(abs(1-(pow((Xnew2/X),2))),0.5));
if(abs(Ynew2) <= R1)
cout<<"\n("<<Xnew2<<", "<<Ynew2<<")"<<endl;
I am having the problem drawing the crescent moon that I cannot get the two circles to have the same starting point? If this makes sense, I am trying to get two parts of circles to draw a crescent moon as such that they have the same start and end points. The only user input I have to work by is the radius and chosen center point.
If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this, it would be great, currently all I am getting more a 'half doughnut' shape, due to the circles not being connected.
-1/0
will evaluate to negative infinity.0/0
will evaluate to NaN.-1.#IND
means that the value is indeterminate. Take a look at the several types of indeterminate values linked, and then make sure your code isn't evaluating to one of them.