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- $atanh (aggregation)
$atanh (aggregation)¶
-
$atanh¶ New in version 4.2.
Returns the inverse hyperbolic tangent (hyperbolic arc tangent) of a value.
$atanhhas the following syntax:$atanhtakes any valid expression that resolves to a number between-1and1, e.g.-1 <= value <= 1.$atanhreturns values in radians. Use$radiansToDegreesoperator to convert the output value from radians to degrees.By default
$atanhreturns values as adouble.$atanhcan also return values as a 128-bit decimal as long as the<expression>resolves to a 128-bit decimal value.For more information on expressions, see Expressions.
Behavior¶
null, NaN, and +/- Infinity¶
If the argument resolves to a value of null or refers to a field
that is missing, $atanh returns null. If the
argument resolves to NaN, $atanh returns NaN.
If the argument resolves to negative or positive infinity,
$atanh throws an error. If the argument resolves to
+1 or -1, $atanh returns Infinity and
-Infinity respectively.
| Example | Results |
|---|---|
{ $atanh: NaN } |
NaN |
{ $atanh: null } |
null |
{ $atanh: 1 } |
Infinity |
{ $atanh: -1} |
-Infinity |
or
|
Throws an error message resembling the following formatted output: |
Example¶
- Inverse Hyperbolic Tangent in Degrees
- Inverse Hyperbolic Tangent in Radians
The trigonometry collection contains a document that
stores a value along the x axis of a 2-D graph:
The following aggregation operation uses the
$atanh expression to calculate inverse hyperbolic
tangent of x-coordinate and add it to the input document using
the $addFields pipeline stage.
The $radiansToDegrees expression converts the
radian value returned by $atanh to the equivalent
value in degrees.
The command returns the following output:
Since x-coordinate is stored as a
128-bit decimal, the output of
$atanh is a 128-bit decimal.
The trigonometry collection contains a document that
stores a value along the x axis of a 2-D graph:
The following aggregation operation uses the
$atanh expression to calculate inverse hyperbolic
tangent of x-coordinate and add it to the input document using
the $addFields pipeline stage.
The command returns the following output:
Since x-coordinate is stored as a
128-bit decimal, the output of
$asin is a 128-bit decimal.