floating-point arithmetic
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It is obvious that
|0.1234-0.123| = 0.0004
however, the following Matlab result is a little bit different!
>> 0.1234-0.123
ans =
3.999999999999976e-04
I think this happens because the IEEE754 conversion of 0.1234 and 0.123 have infinite digits.
Does anyone have more explanation?
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Answers (2)
Star Strider
on 8 Nov 2022
Edited: Star Strider
on 12 Nov 2022
‘I think this happens because the IEEE754 conversion of 0.1234 and 0.123 have infinite digits.’
Correct.
‘Does anyone have more explanation?’
I doubt it. Your explanation about covers it. (The relevant MATLAB documentation is in Floating-Point Numbers.)
.
EDIT — (12 Nov 2022 at 11:44)
‘In double precision we can trust on about 15 decimal digits.In double precision we can trust on about 15 decimal digits.’
format long
FPP = eps
FPP = 1/eps
FPPlog2 = log2(eps)
FPPlog2 = log2(1/eps)
.
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James Tursa
on 8 Nov 2022
Edited: James Tursa
on 8 Nov 2022
"... the IEEE754 conversion of 0.1234 and 0.123 have infinite digits ..."
Not sure what you mean by this statement. Neither of these numbers can be represented exactly in IEEE double precision floating point which of course uses a finite number of binary bits. Maybe you mean an exact conversion of these specific decimal numbers to binary would require an infinite number of binary bits?
The exact binary-to-decimal conversions of the numbers that are stored (the closest representable values to the decimal numbers above) are:
fprintf('%.56f',0.1234)
fprintf('%.52f',0.123)
fprintf('%.56f',0.1234 - 0.123)
8 Comments
James Tursa
on 15 Nov 2022
The change in the background library code for Windows MATLAB was R2017b. Prior to that it displayed trailing 0s after about 16 digits, but from R2017b onwards it displays exact conversion when enough digits are requested. This is what motivated my num2strexact( ) FEX submission many years ago.
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