On 11/02/2013 11:06 PM, Jonathan Wakely wrote:
On 2 November 2013 21:52, Mischa Baars wrote:
You are mistaken :)
Indeed some rational numbers can only be represented up to a certain number
of bits, like 1 / 3. Others can be exactly represented, like 1 / 8.
All real numbers, and therefore all rational numbers, can be represented up
to a certain number of bits.
i.e. not exactly.
Converting 1.1 from string to double should not be a problem.
That's not what your program does. It converts (long double)1.1, which
is not equal to 1.1, to a string.
I'm trying to pass a completely normal value to the debugger and to the
standard output, and do not convert any value to a string.
The fact you don't understand doesn't mean the compiler has a bug, and
this is off topic for this mailing list. You've been asked before to
use gcc-help for this sort of email, instead of reporting "bugs" that
are actually just your incorrect assumptions.