VB.NET This Program Output [duplicate] - vb.net

for (float i = -1; i <= 1; i+=0.1f)
{
Console.WriteLine(i);
}
This is results
-1
-0.9
-0.8
-0.6999999
-0.5999999
-0.4999999
-0.3999999
-0.2999999
-0.1999999
-0.09999993
7.450581E-08
0.1000001
0.2000001
0.3000001
0.4000001
0.5000001
0.6000001
0.7000001
0.8000001
0.9000002

Because a float is not an exact decimal number but a floating point number. Use decimal instead.
See wikipedia for reference: Wikipedia

Float and double are not able to display decimal values exactly. Have a look at wikipedia how they're implemented.
You may want to use Decimal instead.

You need to read this:
What Every Computer Scientist Needs To Know About Floating Point Numbers

Use integer numbers for indexing purposes. And if you need float values inside the loop, calculate it there:
for (int i = -10; i <= 10; i++)
{
Console.WriteLine(i / (float) 10);
}

float represents a 32-bit floating point number. It cannot accurately represent these values. Here is another, must-read-article, about floating point specifically for .NET: http://csharpindepth.com/Articles/General/FloatingPoint.aspx

This is because of you're using floating points. Calculating of floating points is not totally correct, because your computer is using binary numbers internally and not decimal numbers. Good information about that problem are here: http://floating-point-gui.de/

Related

Converting int to double screws up the decimal point

In the debug window, when I input this command:
po 1912/10.0
The output is 191.19999999999999.
What I really want to get back is 191.2.
Why is this happening, and how can I convert an int into a double with precision?
From What Every Programmer Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic:
Why don’t my numbers, like 0.1 + 0.2 add up to a nice round 0.3, and instead I get a weird result like 0.30000000000000004?
Because internally, computers use a format (binary floating-point) that cannot accurately represent a number like 0.1, 0.2 or 0.3 at all.
When the code is compiled or interpreted, your “0.1” is already rounded to the nearest number in that format, which results in a small rounding error even before the calculation happens.
This is why programmers say you should only ever store money as an integer. For example int cents = 1995; rather than float dollars = 19.95.
If your app doesn't need to be 100% precise (for example, if you're calculating screen coordinates or translucency or a color) just format your float rounded to 1 or 2 decimal places:
double someValue = 1912/10.0;
NSLog(#"2 decimals: %.2f", someValue);
NSLog(#"0 decimals: %.0f", someValue);
This code will output:
2 decimals: 191.20
0 decimals: 191
That's normal for a floating point number. Double is obviously just an extended precision floating point number. If you want to keep the pristine decimal digits, then don't allow any float/double conversion. Instead store the result as a scaled integer (in your case 1912) and place the decimal manually.
Let me try to explain this another way. When you express a number with a fractional part with a float or double, precision is most often lost. There's no way around that. If you store 1912 as a float and store 10 as a float then divide the first stored value by the second, the value will NEVER be 191.2. That's just the way floating point numbers work. If you look at the number in a debugger you'll see something like 191.19999999999999 as you describe. This, in itself, is an approximation as the value should be 191.19999999999999... but of course you can't even type all the digits in the decimal value of that stored result as the number of digits approaches infinity.
If you're going to use floating point, that's what you'll get. No way around it.
If you really want to get 191.2, then you can't use floating point, at least without doing rounding. Instead, you need to normalize the numbers by just storing the value as 1912 and printing the value with a decimal point to the left of the 2.
There's another brief online description at http://floating-point-gui.de/basic/

Objective C, division between floats not giving an exact answer

Right now I have a line of code like this:
float x = (([self.machine micSensitivity] - 0.0075f) / 0.00025f);
Where [self.machine micSensitivity] is a float containing the value 0.010000
So,
0.01 - 0.0075 = 0.0025
0.0025 / 0.00025 = 10.0
But in this case, it keeps returning 9.999999
I'm assuming there's some kind of rounding error but I can't seem to find a clean way of fixing it. micSensitivity is incremented/decremented by 0.00025 and that formula is meant to return a clean integer value for the user to reference so I'd rather get the programming right than just adding 0.000000000001.
Thanks.
that formula is meant to return a clean integer value for the user to reference
If that is really important to you, then why do you not multiply all the numbers in this story by 10000, coerce to int, and do integer arithmetic?
Or, if you know that the answer is arbitrarily close to an integer, round to that integer and present it.
Floating-point arithmetic is binary, not decimal. It will almost always give rounding errors. You need to take that into account. "float" has about six digit precision. "double" has about 15 digits precision. You throw away nine digits precision for no reason.
Now think: What do you want to display? What do you want to display if the result of your calculation is 9.999999999? What would you want to display if the result is 9.538105712?
None of the numbers in your question, except 10.0, can be exactly represented in a float or a double on iOS. If you want to do float math with those numbers, you will have rounding errors.
You can round your result to the nearest integer easily enough:
float x = rintf((self.machine.micSensitivity - 0.0075f) / 0.00025f);
Or you can just multiply all your numbers, including the allowed values of micSensitivity, by 4000 (which is 1/0.00025), and thus work entirely with integers.
Or you can change the allowed values of micSensitivity so that its increment is a fraction whose denominator is a power of 2. For example, if you use an increment of 0.000244140625 (which is 2-12), and change 0.0075 to 0.00732421875 (which is 30 * 2-12), you should get exact results, as long as your micSensitivity is within the range ±4096 (since 4096 is 212 and a float has 24 bits of significand).
The code you have posted is correct and functioning properly. This is a known side effect of using floating point arithmetic. See the wiki on floating point accuracy problems for a dull explanation as to why.
There are several ways to work around the problem depending on what you need to use the number for.
If you need to compare two floats, then most everything works OK: less than and greater than do what you would expect. The only trouble is testing if two floats are equal.
// If x and y are within a very small number from each other then they are equal.
if (fabs(x - y) < verySmallNumber) { // verySmallNumber is usually called epsilon.
// x and y are equal (or at least close enough)
}
If you want to print a float, then you can specify a precision to round to.
// Get a string of the x rounded to five digits of precision.
NSString *xAsAString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.5f", x];
9.999999 is equal 10. there is prove:
9.999999 = x then 10x = 99.999999 then 10x-x = 9x = 90 then x = 10

Succesion of numbers passed into a label coming up with weird results

I have 2 buttons that each have a tag number that I pass into this string in which I am just trying to type in either 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1 or 2,2,2,2,2,2,2 or shoot - even, 1,2,2,1,1,1.
Everything works fine until the 8th or 9th time of pressing the button "1" the label says, 111111112. Then if I press the 1 again the label says, 111111168.
Maybe I am going about this totally wrong? Made sense in my head - but now I am just confused. Any help would be amazing, thank you!
-(IBAction)buttonDigitPressed:(id)sender {
currentNumber=currentNumber * 10 + (float)[sender tag];
NSLog(#"currentNumber: %.f", currentNumber);
phoneNumberLabel.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.f",currentNumber];
}
This image shows me hitting the 1 a bunch of times.. you'd think it would just keep showing 1's all the way across, no?
If this is a string operation, you should not do it using numbers. Possible reasons of the error: running out of range (because float is not big enough), loss of precision (because of the nature of float), etc. What you should do instead is
phoneNumberLabel.text = [phoneNumberLabel.text stringByAppendingFormat:#"%d", [sender tag]];
(Single precision) floating point numbers use 23 bits for the mantissa, therefore the largest integer that can be represented exactly by a float is 2^24 = 16777216.
All larger integers can not be represented exactly by a float, therefore the calculation with numbers having 8 or more digits using float cannot be exact.
Double precision floating point numbers can represent numbers up to 2^53 = 9007199254740992 exactly.
A better solution might be to work with integer types (e.g. uint64_t), or with strings as suggested in H2CO3's answer.

Objective-C - Get number of decimals of a double variable

Is there a nice way to get the number of decimals of a double variable in Objective-C?
I am struggling for a while to find a way but with no success.
For example 231.44232000 should return 5.
Thanks in advance.
You could, in a loop, multiply by 10 until the fractional part (returned by modf()) is really close to zero. The number of iterations'll be the answer you're after. Something like:
int countDigits(double num) {
int rv = 0;
const double insignificantDigit = 8;
double intpart, fracpart;
fracpart = modf(num, &intpart);
while ((fabs(fracpart) > 0.000000001f) && (rv < insignificantDigit)) {
num *= 10;
rv++;
fracpart = modf(num, &intpart);
}
return rv;
}
Is there a nice way to get the number of decimals of a double variable in Objective-C?
No. For starters, a double stores a number in binary, so there may not even be an exact binary representation that corresponds to your decimal number. There's also no consideration for the number of significant decimal digits -- if that's important, you'll need to track it separately.
You might want to look into using NSDecimalNumber if you need to store an exact representation of a decimal number. You could create your own subclass and add the ability to store and track significant digits.

Trouble with floats in Objective-C

I've a small problem and I can't find a solution!
My code is (this is only a sample code, but my original code do something like this):
float x = [#"2.45" floatValue];
for(int i=0; i<100; i++)
x += 0.22;
NSLog(#"%f", x);
the output is 52.450001 and not 52.450000 !
I don't know because this happens!
Thanks for any help!
~SOLVED~
Thanks to everybody! Yes, I've solved with the double type!
Floats are a number representation with a certain precision. Not every value can be represented in this format. See here as well.
You can easily think of why this would be the case: there is an unlimited number of number just in the intervall (1..1), but a float only has a limited number of bits to represent all numbers in (-MAXFLOAT..MAXFLOAT).
More aptly put: in a 32bit integer representation there is a countable number of integers to be represented, But there is an infinite innumerable number of real values that cannot be fully represented in a limited representation of 32 or 64bit. Therefore there not only is a limit to the highest and lowest representable real value, but also to the accuracy.
So why is a number that has little digits after the floating point affected? Because the representation is based on a binary system instead of a decimal, making other numbers easily represented then the decimal ones.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point#Accuracy_problems
Floating point numbers can not always be represented easily by computers. This leads to inaccuracy in some digits.
It's like me asking you what 1/3 is in decimal. No matter how hard you try, you're not going to be able to tell me what it is because decimal can't accurately describe that number.
Floats can't accurately describe some decimal numbers.