Go language provides inbuilt support for basic constants and mathematical functions for complex numbers with the help of the cmplx package. You are allowed to find the inverse sine of the specified complex number with the help of the Asin() function provided by the math/cmplx package. So, you need to add a math/cmplx package in your program with the help of the import keyword to access the Asin() function.
Syntax:
func Asin(x complex128) complex128
Let us discuss this concept with the help of the given examples:
Example 1:
// Golang program to illustrate how to find // the Inverse Sine of Complex Number package main import ( "fmt"
"math/cmplx"
) // Main function func main() { // Finding inverse sine of the
// specified complex number
// Using Asin() function
res_1 := cmplx.Asin(3 + 5i)
res_2 := cmplx.Asin(-4 + 8i)
res_3 := cmplx.Asin(-8 - 7i)
// Displaying the result
fmt.Println( "Result 1:" , res_1)
fmt.Println( "Result 2:" , res_2)
fmt.Println( "Result 3:" , res_3)
} |
Output:
Result 1: (0.5339990695941702+2.4598315216234306i) Result 2: (-0.4611616352523445+2.886039504947561i) Result 3: (-0.849771617866465-3.0565545070216835i)
Example 2:
// Golang program to illustrate how to find // the Inverse Sine of Complex Number package main import ( "fmt"
"math/cmplx"
) // Main function func main() { cnumber_1 := complex(5, 7)
cnumber_2 := complex(6, 9)
// Finding inverse sine
cvalue_1 := cmplx.Asin(cnumber_1)
cvalue_2 := cmplx.Asin(cnumber_2)
// Sum of two inverse sine values
res := cvalue_1 + cvalue_2
// Displaying results
fmt.Println( "Complex Number 1: " , cnumber_1)
fmt.Println( "Inverse sine 1: " , cvalue_1)
fmt.Println( "Complex Number 2: " , cnumber_2)
fmt.Println( "Inverse sine 2: " , cvalue_2)
fmt.Println( "Final sum: " , res)
} |
Output:
Complex Number 1: (5+7i) Inverse sine 1: (0.617064296675988+2.846288828208389i) Complex Number 2: (6+9i) Inverse sine 2: (0.5860350919197013+3.075060767946888i) Final sum: (1.2030993885956893+5.921349596155277i)
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