In the last episode (Apr 27), Andrew Reilly said: > > Because 0.0 might be the closest approximation to whatever > number you were really trying to divide by that the hardware can > manage. 0 is never an approximation to 1 or -1. Aaah, but that assumes you're not also trapping on underflow :) -- Dan Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
- Re: floating point exceptions Nate Lawson
- Re: floating point exceptions Brooks Davis
- Re: floating point exceptions David Mosberger
- Re: floating point exceptions Will Andrews
- Re: floating point exceptions Sheldon Hearn
- Re: floating point exceptions Dan Nelson
- Re: floating point exceptions Bill Fumerola
- Re: floating point exceptions Wilko Bulte
- Re: floating point exceptions Wes Peters
- Re: floating point exceptions Andrew Reilly
- Re: floating point exceptions Dan Nelson
- Re: floating point exceptions Martin Cracauer
- Re: floating point exceptions Nate Lawson