elp you?
> > > A 128-bit fixed-length Decimal value in the ANSI SQL Numeric semantics,
> > representing unscaledValue / 10**scale where scale is 0 or positive.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Kazuaki Ishizaki
> >
> >
> >
> > From: Jacek Pliszka
> > T
positive.
>
> Regards,
> Kazuaki Ishizaki
>
>
>
> From: Jacek Pliszka
> To: dev@arrow.apache.org
> Date: 2020/07/02 00:08
> Subject:[EXTERNAL] Re: Decimal128 scale limits
>
>
>
> Hi!
>
> I am aware about at least 2 different decimal128 things:
ect:[EXTERNAL] Re: Decimal128 scale limits
Hi!
I am aware about at least 2 different decimal128 things:
a) the one we have - where we use 128 bits to store integer which is
later shifted by scale - 38 is number of digits of significand i.e.
digits fitting in 128 bits
(2**128/10**38) - IMHO it
Hi!
I am aware about at least 2 different decimal128 things:
a) the one we have - where we use 128 bits to store integer which is
later shifted by scale - 38 is number of digits of significand i.e.
digits fitting in 128 bits
(2**128/10**38) - IMHO it is completely unrelated to scale which we
sto