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authorMeriipu <Meriipu@users.noreply.github.com>2020-07-25 16:11:23 +0200
committerMeriipu <Meriipu@users.noreply.github.com>2020-07-25 20:26:02 +0200
commit7f9bfee0ac4707f2586bd25c04c3883c9eb1be9e (patch)
treedd8e7f049f50eca6252a6e859737c821122dcf44 /modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml
parent5f75cec59e004b5ff0fefdb326f987409b7d7e89 (diff)
GDScript: Clarified/fixed inaccuracies in the built-in function docs.
The input to smoothstep is not actually a weight, and the decscription of smoothstep was pretty hard to understand and easy to misinterpret. Clarified what it means to be approximately equal. nearest_po2 does not do what the descriptions says it does. For one, it returns the same power if the input is a power of 2. Second, it returns 0 if the input is negative or 0, while the smallest possible integral power of 2 actually is 1 (2^0 = 1). Due to the implementation and how it is used in a lot of places, it does not seem wise to change such a core function however, and I decided it is better to alter the description of the built-in. Added a few examples/clarifications/edge-cases.
Diffstat (limited to 'modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml')
-rw-r--r--modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml25
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml b/modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml
index 36de66ea52..d8825ecc9a 100644
--- a/modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml
+++ b/modules/gdscript/doc_classes/@GDScript.xml
@@ -318,7 +318,7 @@
</argument>
<description>
The natural exponential function. It raises the mathematical constant [b]e[/b] to the power of [code]s[/code] and returns it.
- [b]e[/b] has an approximate value of 2.71828.
+ [b]e[/b] has an approximate value of 2.71828, and can be obtained with [code]exp(1)[/code].
For exponents to other bases use the method [method pow].
[codeblock]
a = exp(2) # Approximately 7.39
@@ -505,6 +505,8 @@
</argument>
<description>
Returns [code]true[/code] if [code]a[/code] and [code]b[/code] are approximately equal to each other.
+ Here, approximately equal means that [code]a[/code] and [code]b[/code] are within a small internal epsilon of each other, which scales with the magnitude of the numbers.
+ Infinity values of the same sign are considered equal.
</description>
</method>
<method name="is_inf">
@@ -641,6 +643,7 @@
[codeblock]
log(10) # Returns 2.302585
[/codeblock]
+ [b]Note:[/b] The logarithm of [code]0[/code] returns [code]-inf[/code], while negative values return [code]-nan[/code].
</description>
</method>
<method name="max">
@@ -686,7 +689,9 @@
Moves [code]from[/code] toward [code]to[/code] by the [code]delta[/code] value.
Use a negative [code]delta[/code] value to move away.
[codeblock]
+ move_toward(5, 10, 4) # Returns 9
move_toward(10, 5, 4) # Returns 6
+ move_toward(10, 5, -1.5) # Returns 11.5
[/codeblock]
</description>
</method>
@@ -696,12 +701,17 @@
<argument index="0" name="value" type="int">
</argument>
<description>
- Returns the nearest larger power of 2 for integer [code]value[/code].
+ Returns the nearest equal or larger power of 2 for integer [code]value[/code].
+ In other words, returns the smallest value [code]a[/code] where [code]a = pow(2, n)[/code] such that [code]value &lt;= a[/code] for some non-negative integer [code]n[/code].
[codeblock]
nearest_po2(3) # Returns 4
nearest_po2(4) # Returns 4
nearest_po2(5) # Returns 8
+
+ nearest_po2(0) # Returns 0 (this may not be what you expect)
+ nearest_po2(-1) # Returns 0 (this may not be what you expect)
[/codeblock]
+ [b]WARNING:[/b] Due to the way it is implemented, this function returns [code]0[/code] rather than [code]1[/code] for non-positive values of [code]value[/code] (in reality, 1 is the smallest integer power of 2).
</description>
</method>
<method name="ord">
@@ -1093,12 +1103,15 @@
</argument>
<argument index="1" name="to" type="float">
</argument>
- <argument index="2" name="weight" type="float">
+ <argument index="2" name="s" type="float">
</argument>
<description>
- Returns a number smoothly interpolated between the [code]from[/code] and [code]to[/code], based on the [code]weight[/code]. Similar to [method lerp], but interpolates faster at the beginning and slower at the end.
+ Returns the result of smoothly interpolating the value of [code]s[/code] between [code]0[/code] and [code]1[/code], based on the where [code]s[/code] lies with respect to the edges [code]from[/code] and [code]to[/code].
+ The return value is [code]0[/code] if [code]s &lt;= from[/code], and [code]1[/code] if [code]s &gt;= to[/code]. If [code]s[/code] lies between [code]from[/code] and [code]to[/code], the returned value follows an S-shaped curve that maps [code]s[/code] between [code]0[/code] and [code]1[/code].
+ This S-shaped curve is the cubic Hermite interpolator, given by [code]f(s) = 3*s^2 - 2*s^3[/code].
[codeblock]
- smoothstep(0, 2, 0.5) # Returns 0.15
+ smoothstep(0, 2, -5.0) # Returns 0.0
+ smoothstep(0, 2, 0.5) # Returns 0.15625
smoothstep(0, 2, 1.0) # Returns 0.5
smoothstep(0, 2, 2.0) # Returns 1.0
[/codeblock]
@@ -1114,7 +1127,7 @@
[codeblock]
sqrt(9) # Returns 3
[/codeblock]
- If you need negative inputs, use [code]System.Numerics.Complex[/code] in C#.
+ [b]Note:[/b]Negative values of [code]s[/code] return NaN. If you need negative inputs, use [code]System.Numerics.Complex[/code] in C#.
</description>
</method>
<method name="step_decimals">