Re: Significant Digits in Floating Point Datatype
От | Bill Moran |
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Тема | Re: Significant Digits in Floating Point Datatype |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 4EC95B51.40908@potentialtech.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Significant Digits in Floating Point Datatype (Lee Hachadoorian <lee.hachadoorian@gmail.com>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
On 11/20/11 1:29:37 PM, Lee Hachadoorian wrote: > I would like to store some in a single array some data that is > conceptually related, but some of the data is floating point, and some > of it is integer. Obviously the integer data *can* be stored as double > precision, but I need to know about potential loss of precision. Double > precision has "a precision of at least 15 digits." I would assume that > that would mean that for double precision, 15 digits of data would be > faithfully preserved. But I found a question on the list where a value > stored as 955.60 sometimes returns as 955.599999999998. > (http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-general/2011-08/msg00144.php) If > this is the case, what does "a precision of at least [x] digits" > actually mean? And can I reliably retrieve the original integer by > casting to int (or bigint) if the number of digits in the original > integer is less than 15? Given Tom's answer, you may want to consider whether the DECIMAL data type is a better fit for your needs. -- Bill Moran
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