Returns the natural logarithm of the argument.
math:log( $arg as xs:double?xs:double?If $arg is the empty sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the natural logarithm of $arg, as defined in the
specification of the log function applied
to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The expression math:log(()) returns ().
The expression math:log(0) returns xs:double('-INF').
The expression math:log(math:exp(1)) returns 1.0e0.
The expression math:log(1.0e-3) returns -6.907755278982137e0.
The expression math:log(2) returns 0.6931471805599453e0.
The expression math:log(-1) returns xs:double('NaN').
The expression math:log(xs:double('NaN')) returns xs:double('NaN').
The expression math:log(xs:double('INF')) returns xs:double('INF').
The expression math:log(xs:double('-INF')) returns xs:double('NaN').
The treatment of divideByZero and invalidOperation exceptions
is defined in . The effect is that if the argument is
zero, the result is -INF, and if it is negative, the result is NaN
.