Open In App

Finding the Square Root of Given Number in Golang

Improve
Improve
Like Article
Like
Save
Share
Report

Go language provides inbuilt support for basic constants and mathematical functions to perform operations on the numbers with the help of the math package. You are allowed to find the square root of the specified number with the help of the Sqrt() function provided by the math package. So, you need to add a math package in your program with the help of the import keyword to access the Sqrt() function.

Syntax:

func Sqrt(a float64) float64
  • If you pass +Inf in this function, then this function will return +Inf.
  • If you pass +0 or -0 in this function, then this function will return +0 or -0.
  • If the value of a < -1, then this function will return NaN.
  • If you pass NaN in this function, then this function will return NaN.

Example 1:




// Golang program to illustrate how to find
// the square root of the given number
  
package main
  
import (
    "fmt"
    "math"
)
  
// Main function
func main() {
  
    // Finding square root 
    // of the given number
    // Using Sqrt() function
    res_1 := math.Sqrt(0)
    res_2 := math.Sqrt(-100)
    res_3 := math.Sqrt(math.Inf(1))
    res_4 := math.Sqrt(math.NaN())
    res_5 := math.Sqrt(36)
  
    // Displaying the result
    fmt.Printf("Result 1: %.1f", res_1)
    fmt.Printf("\nResult 2: %.1f", res_2)
    fmt.Printf("\nResult 3: %.1f", res_3)
    fmt.Printf("\nResult 4: %.1f", res_4)
    fmt.Printf("\nResult 5: %.1f", res_5)
  
}


Output:

Result 1: 0.0
Result 2: NaN
Result 3: +Inf
Result 4: NaN
Result 5: 6.0

Example 2:




// Golang program to illustrate how to find
// the square root of the given number
  
package main
  
import (
    "fmt"
    "math"
)
  
// Main function
func main() {
  
    // Finding square root 
    // of the given number
    // Using Sqrt() function
    nvalue_1 := math.Sqrt(100)
    nvalue_2 := math.Sqrt(25)
    res := nvalue_1 + nvalue_2
    fmt.Printf("%.3f + %.3f = %.3f",
            nvalue_1, nvalue_2, res)
  
}


Output:

10.000 + 5.000 = 15.000


Last Updated : 01 Apr, 2020
Like Article
Save Article
Previous
Next
Share your thoughts in the comments
Similar Reads