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February 15, 2014 Floating point init/nan | ||||
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I seem to be having some difficulty with the nan and init properties of floating point types. Can anyone explain why the following assertions all fail: assert(float.init == float.nan); assert(float.nan == float.nan); assert(float.init == float.init); Thanks. |
February 15, 2014 Re: Floating point init/nan | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam S | On Saturday, 15 February 2014 at 05:18:51 UTC, Adam S wrote: > assert(float.init == float.nan); nan never equals nan, this is in the floating point spec used by D, C and others. Use this instead: http://dlang.org/phobos/std_math.html#isNaN |
February 15, 2014 Re: Floating point init/nan | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam D. Ruppe | Adam D. Ruppe:
> nan never equals nan,
Additionally, the init NaN doesn't have the same bitpattern as the other. There are many NaNs.
Bye,
bearophile
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February 15, 2014 Re: Floating point init/nan | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam D. Ruppe | On Saturday, February 15, 2014 05:28:05 Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
> On Saturday, 15 February 2014 at 05:18:51 UTC, Adam S wrote:
> > assert(float.init == float.nan);
>
> nan never equals nan, this is in the floating point spec used by D, C and others.
To be more precise, NaN is never equal to _anything_ - not even itself. Any comparison with NaN as one of the operands results in false - just like any floating point arithmetic with NaN in it results in NaN. The idea is that that way the error which introduced NaN in the first place will propagate and therefore be found rather than being hidden. Sometimes, this is very useful, and sometimes it's a bit annoying, but it's way the IEEE floating point spec says that it's supposed to be.
- Jonathan M Davis
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