Python math.degrees()
Anonymous contributor
Published Aug 22, 2024
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In Python, the math.degrees() function takes an angle measured in radians and returns its degree equivalent as a floating-point value.
Syntax
math.degrees(x)
x: A numeric value or expression representing an angle in radians. If it is not a number, the function will raise aTypeError.
Here is an image that illustrates some common degree-radian equivalencies:

Example 1
In the example below, the math.degrees() function returns the degree equivalent of π:
import mathpi = math.piprint(math.degrees(pi))
The above code gives the following output:
180.0
Example 2
In the following example, the math.degrees() function returns the degree equivalent of 1 radian:
import mathprint(math.degrees(1.0))
The above code produces the following output:
57.29577951308232
Codebyte Example
The following codebyte example demonstrates how the math.degrees() function works:
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