Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
126 lines (93 loc) · 4.21 KB

File metadata and controls

126 lines (93 loc) · 4.21 KB
description EXP (Transact-SQL)
title EXP (Transact-SQL) | Microsoft Docs
ms.custom
ms.date 03/06/2017
ms.prod sql
ms.prod_service database-engine, sql-database, sql-data-warehouse, pdw
ms.reviewer
ms.technology t-sql
ms.topic language-reference
f1_keywords
EXP_TSQL
EXP
dev_langs
TSQL
helpviewer_keywords
exponential functions
EXP function
ms.assetid 5a9b8c52-6fb6-4e33-8b02-a878785b2f51
author markingmyname
ms.author maghan
monikerRange >=aps-pdw-2016||=azuresqldb-current||=azure-sqldw-latest||>=sql-server-2016||>=sql-server-linux-2017||=azuresqldb-mi-current

EXP (Transact-SQL)

[!INCLUDE sql-asdb-asdbmi-asa-pdw]

Returns the exponential value of the specified float expression.

Topic link icon Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions

Syntax

EXP ( float_expression )  

[!INCLUDEsql-server-tsql-previous-offline-documentation]

Arguments

float_expression
Is an expression of type float or of a type that can be implicitly converted to float.

Return Types

float

Remarks

The constant e (2.718281...), is the base of natural logarithms.

The exponent of a number is the constant e raised to the power of the number. For example EXP(1.0) = e^1.0 = 2.71828182845905 and EXP(10) = e^10 = 22026.4657948067.

The exponential of the natural logarithm of a number is the number itself: EXP (LOG (n)) = n. And the natural logarithm of the exponential of a number is the number itself: LOG (EXP (n)) = n.

Examples

A. Finding the exponent of a number

The following example declares a variable and returns the exponential value of the specified variable (10) with a text description.

DECLARE @var FLOAT  
SET @var = 10  
SELECT 'The EXP of the variable is: ' + CONVERT(VARCHAR, EXP(@var))  
GO  

[!INCLUDEssResult]

----------------------------------------------------------  
The EXP of the variable is: 22026.5  
(1 row(s) affected)  

B. Finding exponentials and natural logarithms

The following example returns the exponential value of the natural logarithm of 20 and the natural logarithm of the exponential of 20. Because these functions are inverse functions of one another, the return value in both cases is 20.

SELECT EXP(LOG(20)), LOG(EXP(20))  
GO  

[!INCLUDEssResult]

---------------------- ----------------------  
20                     20  
  
(1 row(s) affected)  

Examples: [!INCLUDEssSDWfull] and [!INCLUDEssPDW]

C. Finding the exponent of a number

The following example returns the exponential value of the specified value (10).

SELECT EXP(10);  

[!INCLUDEssResult]

----------  
22026.4657948067  

D. Finding exponential values and natural logarithms

The following example returns the exponential value of the natural logarithm of 20 and the natural logarithm of the exponential of 20. Because these functions are inverse functions of one another, the return value in both cases is 20.

SELECT EXP( LOG(20)), LOG( EXP(20));  

[!INCLUDEssResult]

-------------- -----------------  
20                  20  

See Also

Mathematical Functions (Transact-SQL)
LOG (Transact-SQL)
LOG10 (Transact-SQL)