SINH Formula

Returns the hyperbolic sine of an angle in radians.

Syntax

Formula structure

Source: Quadratic docs
=SINH(radians)
radians
Required: Yes

Required argument used by the SINH formula.

Examples for the sinh formula

Copy these examples into a spreadsheet and adjust the ranges for your own data.

SINH syntax pattern

=SINH(radians)

Use this SINH pattern as the starting point for your spreadsheet formula.

SINH in a worksheet

=SINH(radians)

Returns the hyperbolic sine of an angle in radians.

When to use SINH

Use SINH when you need to return the hyperbolic sine of an angle in radians.

  • Convert and calculate angles.
  • Model geometry, waves, and other trigonometric relationships.

How SINH works in Quadratic

In Quadratic, SINH follows the syntax SINH(radians). The function works inside Quadratic formulas and can be combined with spreadsheet ranges, tables, and other formulas.

Common SINH mistakes

Most SINH issues come from mismatched argument types, ranges that do not cover the intended data, or optional parameters being omitted when the default behavior is not what you expected.

  • Check each required parameter before copying the formula across a sheet.
  • Confirm that ranges line up with the rows or columns you intend to analyze.
  • Use Quadratic AI to explain or debug the formula when the result looks wrong.

Related formulas

SINH formula FAQ

What does the sinh formula do?

SINH returns the hyperbolic sine of an angle in radians.

What is the syntax for SINH?

The syntax is SINH(radians). Required and optional parameters are listed at the top of this guide.

Can Quadratic AI help with SINH?

Yes. Quadratic AI can write a SINH formula, explain existing formula logic, or help debug broken references and unexpected results.

Quadratic AI

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Spreadsheet formulas are powerful, but they get painful fast. A SINH formula can start simple, then turn into logic that is hard to understand, easy to break, and difficult to share with the rest of your team.

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Why formulas slow teams down

  • Long formulas become hard to read, understand, and trust.
  • Formula logic breaks when rows, columns, or assumptions change.
  • Manual updates make dashboards and reports fragile over time.
  • Complex formulas are difficult to explain, review, and share with teammates.
  • Advanced analysis quickly outgrows formula-only workflows.