It's not. A fixed point is where the function crosses the axis and so the (first) fixed point of cosine is pi/2 in radians, 90 in degrees and 100 in grad. I say first fixed point because it has another fixed point at 3pi/4 in rad, 270 in deg and 300 in grad.
To show it by iteration with rad, use the N-R equation xn+1=xn- f(xn)/f'(xn) which gives us xn+1=xn+cos(xn)/sin(xn) if we start with an initial point x0=pi/4=0.785398163 then the iterations give us:
x1=1.785398163
x2=1.567440065
x3=1.570796339
x4=1.570796327=pi/2 to 10 s.f.
There's some confusion here about the phrase "fixed point". 0.7390851332 is a fixed point in the sense that cos(0.7390851332)=0.7390851332 . This is not to be confused with stationary point.
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what is the cosine of 3.14 ?
Cosine of 1 degree is about 0.999848. Cosine of 1 radian is about 0.540302.
Tangent = sine/cosine provided that cosine is non-zero. When cosine is 0, then tangent is undefined.
Cosine is 0.766
You mean, you have the cosine, and want the angle? That is called arc-cosine, often written as cos-1x. Your scientific calculator should have a "shift" key or something similar, which you press, followed by the cosine key. That will give you the inverse cosine or arc-cosine.