I literally tried it!!! And it did not stop because I did not get any 1.0 rather I got 0.99999999999 But why does this happen. This is a simple math which according to normal human logic should give perfect numbers which are not endless. Then why does a computer behave so differently?
On Sat, 18 Apr, 2020, 7:02 pm DL Neil via Python-list, < python-list@python.org> wrote: > On 19/04/20 1:07 AM, Souvik Dutta wrote: > > I have one question here. On using print(f"{c:.32f}") where c= 2/5 > instead > > of getting 32 zeroes I got some random numbers. The exact thing is > > 0.40000000000000002220446049250313 > > Why do I get this and not 32 zeroes? > > Approximating decimal numbers as binary values. > > Do NOT try this at home! How many lines will the following code display > on-screen? > > >>> v = 0.1 > >>> while v != 1.0: > ... print(v) > ... v += 0.1 > > As an exercise, try dividing 1.0 by 10.0 and then adding the result to > itself ten times. > > Back in the ?good, old days, a Computer Science course would almost > certainly involve some "Numerical Analysis", when such issues would be > discussed. Not sure that many institutions offer such, these days... > -- > Regards =dn > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list