Shachar Shemesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Before you explode at me (again :), I'm not arguing that you can do > binary based calculations of decimal numbers without having rounding > errors that come to bite you. I know you can't. What I'm saying is that > we have two cases to consider. In one of them the above is irrelevant, > and in the other I'm not so sure it's true.
You're setting up a straw-man argument, though. The real-world problem cases here are not decimal, they are non-IEEE binary floating arithmetic. The typical difference from IEEE is slightly different tradeoffs in number of mantissa bits vs number of exponent bits within a 32- or 64-bit value. I seem to recall also that there are machines that treat the exponent as power-of-16 not power-of-2. So depending on which way the tradeoffs went, the other format will have either more precision or more range than IEEE. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate