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Whenever I try to use any of the built-in functions of Python's exponentiation and logarithms module, I get an error like this:

NameError: name 'sqrt' is not defined

I have tried using math.sqrt(4),sqrt(4) and sqrt(4.0), but none of them work. The exception is pow, which works as it's supposed to. This is really strange and I'm not sure what's wrong.

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7 Answers 7

57

pow is built into the language(not part of the math library). The problem is that you haven't imported math.

Try this:

import math
math.sqrt(4)
18

You can also import as

from math import *

Then you can use any mathematical function without prefixing math. e.g.

sqrt(4)
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  • 1
    But be aware that the Style Guide for Python Code says: "Wildcard imports (from <module> import *) should be avoided, as they make it unclear which names are present in the namespace, confusing both readers and many automated tools.".
    – Matthias
    Jun 29, 2023 at 5:31
  • It can also "destroy" variables you defined elsewhere, e.g., if you had a constant or function "e" (e.g., for "error"), then from math import * will erase the definition with the constant e = 2.718281828 defined in the math module. Since you don't know all the names defined there, it's a bad idea. If you don't want to use "math." in front of each function, either import just what you need (from math import sin,cos,exp,log) or import math as m which allows you to use m.sin, m.cos, m.exp, m.log, ...
    – Max
    Mar 4 at 18:59
5

add:

import math

at beginning. and then use:

math.sqrt(num)  # or any other function you deem neccessary
2

You need to say math.sqrt when you use it. Or, do from math import sqrt.

Hmm, I just read your question more thoroughly.... How are you importing math? I just tried import math and then math.sqrt which worked perfectly. Are you doing something like import math as m? If so, then you have to prefix the function with m (or whatever name you used after as).

pow is working because there are two versions: an always available version in __builtin__, and another version in math.

1
import math #imports math module

import math as m
print(m.sqrt(25))

from math import sqrt #imports a method from math module
print(sqrt(25))

from math import sqrt as s
print(s(25))

from math import *
print(sqrt(25))
0

In

from math import sqrt

Using sqrt(4) works perfectly well. You need to only use math.sqrt(4) when you just use "import math".

0
import math as m
a=int(input("Enter the no"))
print(m.sqrt(a))

from math import sqrt
print(sqrt(25))

from math import sqrt as s
print(s(25))

from math import *
print(sqrt(25))

All works.

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  • 2
    Dont put the code directly. Provide explanation. Go through this link to answer better Apr 23, 2019 at 11:03

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