Hello,
>
> IMHO, no.
> The fact 0 is signed for doubles is really a trick set up in the IEE754 
> standard only for dealing with branch cuts (like the division you present). 
> It is not available for other types like int or longs where 0 is not signed 
> and special numbers like infinity and NaN and even subnormals do not exist. 
> Our fractions are both closer to the mathematical Z set and to the computer 
> science int primitives pairs than to double. There is a conversion method 
> doubleValue, but it should rather be considered an extension than a core 
> feature.
>
> Luc
>
I was initially going to answer along these lines, but refrained to do
so, because I realized that Q is actually closer to R than Z. Indeed,
you cannot define a limit in Z, but you probably can in Q, since Q is
dense in R. So, defining a signed zero as being as signed fraction
with absolute value smaller than 1/Integer.MAX_VALUE might be
meaningful.

I'm not saying we should do it, but I can see Gilles' point. Gilles,
do you have any practical application in mind ?
Sébastien


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