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I'm trying to understand the math behind the Math.tan method but it doesn't make any sense. Can someone please explain to me how it works?

Firstly the mathematical formula to solve for a tangent angle is Tangent = Opposite/Adjacent. Which means I need to know two sides of the triangle to figure out the tangent angle. However the Math.tan method only accept a single argument in radians, not the length of two sides, so I don't understand how it's figuring out the angle of the tangent.

Next in examples they show passing impossibly huge radian values into the method and getting back a value. For example, W3 schools shows the example of Math.tan(90) but 90 radians equals 5,156.6 degrees which is an impossible angle for a corner of a right triangle.

How does this method work, what's happening behind the scenes that turns 90 radians into a tangent angle of -1.995200412208242

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  • Did you read the fine docs?
    – Braiam
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:44
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    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the problem is a lack of minimal understanding of the underlying math concept. The question belongs to math.stackexchange.com
    – Oriol
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:44
  • It would presumably do angle % (2 * PI) behind the scenes to get an angle into range.
    – Ken Y-N
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:45
  • I understand the math behind figuring out a tangent angle, the question is that the Method doesn't use that math like you would expect. Asking this question outside of javascript developers is just going to result in the same response as googling how to find the angle of a tangent. I.e. Tangent = Opposite/Adjacent, which obviously this method isn't using.
    – efarley
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:46
  • That doesn't work out @KenY-N, for example 90 / 2 * PI = 14.3239, where as Math.tan(90) = -1.995200412208242
    – efarley
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:49

1 Answer 1

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First let's talk about what a tangent is: Tangent is y/x for the coordinate at a specific point (see this YouTube video for an example).

So if you want the tangent of pi over 2, on a graph, that's at a 90 degree angle, so the coordinate is (0, 1). Then you just divide 1/0.

However, Math.tan isn't very precise. In Chrome 52, Math.tan(Math.PI / 2) (from the video above) is 16331239353195370, even though it should evaluate to the Infinity value in JavaScript (the mathematical value is actually undefined since it works out to 1/0).

According to this answer, the V8 implementation is:

function MathTan(x) {
  return MathSin(x) / MathCos(x);
}

(As a side note: The value that Chrome actually outputs is larger than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER, which you can prove by running Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER < Math.tan(Math.PI / 2) // => true, so Chrome takes it to be "close to infinity".)

Edit

The reason for the lack of a precise value is that pi is generally represented as a fixed value (since we have limitations in computer memory), even though it should be "Infinity" or "undefined" outside of the context of programming. For example, in my browser, Math.PI is fixed at 3.141592653589793.

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    "even though it should" --- it should for a π / 2, while you have Math.PI / 2. π is irrational. "However, Math.tan isn't very precise" -- it's not Math.tan problem.
    – zerkms
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:53
  • it divides the sin by the cos, that's it! :)
    – efarley
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:54
  • @zerkms thanks for your comment. Good clarification. I meant that in the world outside of programming, pi/2 should be "Inifinity" or "undefined", but we have limitations on what numbers we can hold in computer memory. So Math.PI in my browser, for example, is only 3.141592653589793.
    – Josh Beam
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:54
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    @efarley which is entry level trigonometry...
    – VLAZ
    Sep 14, 2016 at 23:55
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    Btw, that's how Math.tan is implemented in a modern v8 (not a simple sin/cos division anymore): github.com/v8/v8/blob/master/src/base/ieee754.cc#L2546
    – zerkms
    Sep 15, 2016 at 0:04

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