--- title: Floating Point TARGET DECK: Obsidian::STEM FILE TAGS: binary::float ieee tags: - binary - ieee - float --- ## Overview The IEEE floating-point standard defines an encoding used to represent numbers of form $$(-1)^s \times M \times 2^E$$ where $s$ denotes the **sign bit**, $M$ the **significand**, and $E$ the **exponent**. The binary representation of floating point numbers are segmented into three fields: the sign bit, the exponent field, and the fraction field. Furthermore, there are three classes these fields are interpreted with respect to: * Normalized Form * Here the exponent field is neither all `0`s nor all `1`s. * The significand is $1 + f$, where $f$ denotes the fractional part. * $E = e - Bias$ where $e$ is the unsigned interpretation of the exponent field. * Denormalized Form * Here the exponent field is all `0`s. * The significand is $f$, where $f$ denotes the fractional part. * $E = 1 - Bias$, defined for smooth transition between normalized and denormalized values. * Special Values * Here the exponent field is all `1`s. * If the fraction field is all `0`s, we have an $\infty$ value. * If the fraction field is not all `0`s, we have $NaN$. The $Bias$ in the first two forms is set to $2^{k - 1} - 1$ where $k$ denotes the number of bits that make up the exponent field. In C, fields have the following widths: Declaration | Sign Bit | Exponent Field | Fractional Field ----------- | -------- | -------------- | ---------------- `float` | `1` | `8` | `23` `double` | `1` | `11` | `52` %%ANKI Basic In base-10 scientific notation, what form do non-zero numbers take on? Back: $m \times 10^n$ Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What radix is implicitly specified in scientific notation form $m \times 10^n$? Back: $10$ Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic In base-10 scientific notation, what numbers does $m$ take on in form $m \times 10^n$? Back: A non-zero real number. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic In base-10 scientific notation, what numbers does $n$ take on in $m \times 10^n$? Back: An integer. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What term refers to $m$ in scientific notation $m \times 10^n$? Back: The significand. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What term refers to $n$ in scientific notation $m \times 10^n$? Back: The exponent. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What does it mean for $m \times 10^n$ to be in normalized form? Back: That $1 \leq |m| < 10$. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic In base-2 scientific notation, what form do non-zero numbers take on? Back: $m \times 2^n$ Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What radix is implicitly specified in scientific notation form $m \times 2^n$? Back: $2$ Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic In base-2 scientific notation, what numbers does $m$ take on in form $m \times 2^n$? Back: A non-zero real number. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic In base-2 scientific notation, what numbers does $n$ take on in $m \times 2^n$? Back: An integer. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What term refers to $m$ in scientific notation $m \times 2^n$? Back: The significand. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What term refers to $n$ in scientific notation $m \times 2^n$? Back: The exponent. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic What does it mean for scientific notation $m \times 2^n$ to be in normalized form? Back: That $m$ has value $1$. Reference: “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750). END%% %%ANKI Basic How is IEEE pronounced? Back: "eye-triple-ee" Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is IEEE an acronym for? Back: **I**nstitute of **E**lectrical and **E**lectronics **E**ngineers. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What IEEE standard (number) describes floating point operations? Back: 754 Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What alternative name does IEEE Standard 754 go by? Back: IEEE floating-point Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What floating point encoding is guaranteed by the C standard? Back: N/A Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What floating point encoding is used in most C implementations? Back: IEEE Standard 754 Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How are digits left of a decimal point weighted? Back: As a nonnegative power of $10$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How are digits right of a decimal point weighted? Back: As negative powers of $10$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How are digits left of a binary point weighted? Back: As a nonnegative power of $2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How are digits right of a binary point weighted? Back: As a negative power of $2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the decimal expansion of binary $10.11_2$? Back: $2^1 + 2^{-1} + 2^{-2} = 2.75$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What decimal value does $0.1111_2$ evaluate to? Back: $\frac{15}{16}$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What decimal value does $0.11_2$ evaluate to? Back: $\frac{3}{4}$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What decimal value does $0.11\cdots1_2$ evaluate to? Back: Given $n$ $1$'s, $1 - 2^{-n}$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What visualization explains why $0.11\cdots1_2 = 1 - 2^{-n}$? Back: Each additional $1$ adds half of the remaining interval to a running total. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of shifting the decimal point of $d_m \cdots d_1 d_0 . d_{-1} d_{-2} \cdots d_{-n}$ to the left? Back: Division by $10$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of shifting the decimal point of $d_m \cdots d_1 d_0 . d_{-1} d_{-2} \cdots d_{-n}$ to the right? Back: Multiplication by $10$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of shifting the binary point of $b_m \cdots b_1 b_0 . b_{-1} b_{-2} \cdots b_{-n}$ to the right? Back: Multiplication by $2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of shifting the binary point of $b_m \cdots b_1 b_0 . b_{-1} b_{-2} \cdots b_{-n}$ to the left? Back: Division by $2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What binary pattern does $1 - \epsilon$ denote? Back: $0.11\cdots1$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What compact notation is used to denote $0.11\cdots1_2$? Back: $1 - \epsilon$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What compact notation is used to denote $1.11\cdots1_2$? Back: $2 - \epsilon$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What name is given to the $.$ in decimal number $d_m \cdots d_1 d_0 . d_{-1} d_{-2} \cdots d_{-n}$? Back: The decimal point. END%% %%ANKI Basic What name is given to the $.$ in binary number $b_m \cdots b_1 b_0 . b_{-1} b_{-2} \cdots b_{-n}$? Back: The binary point. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze The IEEE floating-point standard represents numbers in form {1:$(-1)^s$} $\times$ {1:$M$} $\times$ {1:$2^E$}. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What term is used to refer to $s$ in IEEE floating-point $(-1)^s \times M \times 2^E$? Back: The sign. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What term is used to refer to $M$ in IEEE floating-point $(-1)^s \times M \times 2^E$? Back: The significand. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What range of values does the significand $M$ take on in IEEE floating-point? Back: Between $1$ and $2 - \epsilon$ or between $0$ and $1 - \epsilon$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What term is used to refer to $E$ in IEEE floating-point $(-1)^s \times M \times 2^E$? Back: The exponent. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic The bit representation of a floating-point number is divided into what three fields? Back: The sign, exponent, and fraction. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the sign field of a `float`? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the exponent field of a `float`? Back: `8` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the fraction field of a `float`? Back: `23` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the sign field of a `double`? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the exponent field of a `double`? Back: `11` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic How many bits make up the fraction field of a `double`? Back: `52` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Cloze The exponent field of a `float` has {`8`} bits and a `double` has {`11`} bits. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Cloze The fraction field of a `float` has {`23`} bits and a `double` has {`52`} bits. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic Which IEEE floating-point fields have the same width in `float`s and `double`s? Back: The sign bit field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic Which IEEE floating-point fields have different widths in `float`s and `double`s? Back: The exponent and fraction fields. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic When is a floating-point number considered normalized? Back: When the exponent field is neither all `0`s nor all `1`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What distinguishes the exponent *field* from the exponent *value*? Back: The latter refers to the value after biasing the unsigned interpretation of the former. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What does the bias refer to? Back: The number used to adjust the interpreted value of the exponent field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the value of the bias? Back: Given $k$ bits in the exponent field, $2^{k-1} - 1$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How do you determine the exponent *value* in normalized form? Back: $e - Bias$ where $e$ is the unsigned interpretation of the exponent field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How do you determine the significand value in normalized form? Back: It equals $1$ plus the fraction field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze A sign bit value of {1:$0$} is positive and {1:$1$} is negative. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which floating-point field is the bias relevant to? Back: The exponent field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How do you determine the sign of a normalized floating-point? Back: A sign bit of $0$ is positive, a sign bit of $1$ is negative. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic For which floating-point form is "implied leading $1$" relevant? Back: Normalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which floating-point form is depicted in the following? ![[normalized-form.png]] Back: Normalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic When is a floating-point number considered denormalized? Back: When the exponent field is all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How do you determine the exponent *value* in denormalized form? Back: $1 - Bias$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How do you determine the significand value in denormalized form? Back: It equals the fraction field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is value $0$ representable in normalized form? Back: No. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is value $0$ representable in denormalized form? Back: Yes. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which floating-point form corresponds to very large numbers ($|V| \gg 0$)? Back: Normalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which floating-point form corresponds to near $0$ numbers ($|V| \ll 1$)? Back: Denormalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze {1:$|V| \ll 1$} is to {2:denormalized} form whereas {2:$|V| \gg 0$} is to {1:normalized} form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze Significand range {$[0, 1 - \epsilon]$} is to denormalized whereas {2:$[1, 2 - \epsilon]$} is to normalized. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* can't normalized floating-point encode $0$? Back: Because of the implied leading $1$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which number can be encoded in two different ways? Back: $0$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic In what two ways can $0$ be encoded? Back: As $-0.0$ or $+0.0$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the actual bit encoding of floating-point number $+0.0$? Back: All `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the actual bit encoding of floating-point number $-0.0$? Back: A sign bit `1` followed by all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which floating-point form is depicted in the following? ![[denormalized-form.png]] Back: Denormalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the actual bit encoding of floating-point number $+\infty$? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field of all `1`s, a fractional field of all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the actual bit encoding of floating-point number $-\infty$? Back: Sign bit `1`, exponent field of all `1`s, a fractional field of all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the actual bit encoding of floating-point number $NaN$? Back: An exponent field of all `1`s and a non-zero fractional field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What value is encoded in the following image? ![[infinity.png]] Back: Infinity. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What value is encoded in the following image? ![[nan.png]] Back: Not-a-number. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze {1:$e - Bias$} is to {2:normalized} form whereas {2:$1 - Bias$} is to {1:denormalized} form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which form corresponds to exponent value $e - Bias$, where $e$ is the unsigned interpretation of the exponent field? Back: Normalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic In normalized form's exponent value $e - Bias$, what does $e$ refer to? Back: The unsigned interpretation of the exponent field. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which form corresponds to exponent value $1 - Bias$? Back: Denormalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* is denormalized form's exponent value defined as $1 - Bias$? Back: It provides a smooth transition between values in normalized and denormalized form. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the first integer value not exactly representable by a `float`? Back: $2^{24} + 1$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the first integer value not exactly representable by a `double`? Back: $2^{53} + 1$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the first integer value not exactly representable by an IEEE floating-point number? Back: Given $n > 0$ fractional bits, $2^{n + 1} + 1$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Given $n > 0$ fractional bits, *why* is $2^{n+1} + 1$ the first integer value not exactly representable? Back: There exists a maximum of $n + 1$ significant digits in the significand. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the largest normalized positive `float`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field $11 \cdots 10_2$, fraction field all `1`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the smallest positive `float`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field `0`s, fraction field $00 \cdots 01_2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the smallest normalized positive `float`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field $00 \cdots 01_2$, fraction field all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic Let `float x = 1.0`. What is the bit representation of `x`'s exponent *field*? Back: `01111111` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic Let `double x = 1.0`. What is the bit representation of `x`'s exponent *field*? Back: `01111111111` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the largest normalized positive `double`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field $11 \cdots 10_2$, fraction field all `1`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the smallest normalized positive `double`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field $00 \cdots 01_2$, fraction field all `0`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the bit representation of the smallest positive `double`? Back: Sign bit `0`, exponent field all `0`s, fraction field $00 \cdots 01_2$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the largest unsigned interpretation of a `float`'s exponent *field*? Back: $2^8 - 2$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the smallest positive `float` that can be exactly represented? Back: $2^{-23}$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the largest unsigned interpretation of a `double`'s exponent field? Back: $2^{11} - 2$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the smallest positive `double` that can be exactly represented? Back: $2^{-52}$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. Tags: c17 END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the smallest positive IEEE floating-point number that can be exactly represented? Back: Given $n$ fractional bits, $2^{-n}$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What range does the exponent *value* take on in normalized form? Back: Integer values in closed interval $[1 - Bias, Bias]$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What range does the exponent *value* take on in denormalized form? Back: The exponent always evaluates to $1 - Bias$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the signficance of term $1$ in "the smallest normalized exponent *value* is $1 - Bias$"? Back: The smallest unsigned interpretation of a normalized exponent field is $1$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How does the largest unsigned interpretation of the exponent *field* relate to the $Bias$? Back: The largest unsigned interpretation is $2 \times Bias$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How does the largest exponent *value* relate to the $Bias$? Back: It equals $Bias$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How does the smallest exponent *value* relate to the $Bias$? Back: It equals $1 - Bias$. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What three forms can an IEEE floating-point number take on? Back: Normalized, denormalized, and special value. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic When is a floating-point number considered a special value? Back: When the exponent field is all `1`s. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What special values can a floating-point number take on? Back: $\infty$ and $NaN$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Representable floating-point numbers are denser around what? Back: $0$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic IEEE floating-point was designed to allow efficiently sorting using what? Back: An integer sorting routine. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* can IEEE floating-point values be sorted using an integer sorting routine? Back: The unsigned interpretation of ascending floating-point numbers is also ascending. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What complication exists in integer sorting routines applied to IEEE floating-point values? Back: The unsigned interpretation of negative floating-point numbers is in descending order. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% ## Rounding Because floating-point arithmetic can't represent every real number, it must round results to the "nearest" representable number, however "nearest" is defined. The IEEE floating-point standard defines four **rounding modes** to influence this behavior: * **Round-to-even** rounds numbers to the closest representable value. In the case of values equally between two representations, it rounds to the number with an even least significant digit. * **Round-toward-zero** rounds downward for positive values and upward for negative values. * **Round-down** always rounds downward. * **Round-up** always rounds upward. %%ANKI Basic What are the four rounding modes supported in the IEEE floating-point standard? Back: Round-to-even, round-toward-zero, round-down, and round-up. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze {1:Round-toward-zero} is to {2:integer} division whereas {2:round-down} is to {1:floor} division. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Cloze {1:Round-up} is to {2:ceiling} division whereas {2:round-toward-zero} is to {1:integer} division. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the default IEEE floating-point standard rounding mode? Back: Round-to-even. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What alternative name does round-to-even go by? Back: Round-to-nearest. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.40` rounded in round-to-even mode? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.50` rounded in round-to-even mode? Back: `2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.60` rounded in round-to-even mode? Back: `2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `-1.50` rounded in round-to-even mode? Back: `-2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.40` rounded in round-to-zero mode? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.50` rounded in round-to-zero mode? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `-1.50` rounded in round-to-zero mode? Back: `-1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.40` rounded in round-down mode? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.50` rounded in round-down mode? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `-1.50` rounded in round-down mode? Back: `-2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.40` rounded in round-up mode? Back: `2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `1.50` rounded in round-up mode? Back: `2` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is floating-point `-1.50` rounded in round-up mode? Back: `-1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* does round-to-even prefer even over odd numbers? Back: This is an arbitrary choice. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* does round-to-even prefer even over always rounding down? Back: The former more reliably avoids potential statistical biases. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic In round-to-even rounding, what bit is considered even? Back: `0` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic In round-to-even rounding, what bit is considered odd? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How does the IEEE floating-point standard define $1/-0$? Back: $-\infty$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How does the IEEE floating-point standard define $1/+0$? Back: $\infty$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What value(s) do IEEE floating-point numbers take on in the case of overflow? Back: $\pm\infty$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What value(s) do IEEE floating-point numbers take on in the case of underflow? Back: $0$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% ## Arithmetic %%ANKI Basic What does $+^f$ denote? Back: Floating-point addition. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of $x +^f y$? Back: $Round(x + y)$ where $Round$ refers to the current rounding-mode. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is $+^f$ commutative? Back: Yes. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is $+^f$ associative? Back: No. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Which IEEE floating-point values do not have an additive inverse? Back: $\pm\infty$ and $NaN$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Let $f$ be a normalized floating-point value. What is its additive inverse? Back: $-f$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Let $f$ be a denormalized floating-point value. What is its additive inverse? Back: $-f$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Let $f$ be a special floating-point value. What is its additive inverse? Back: N/A Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the most important group quality $+^f$ is lacking? Back: Associativity. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What does $*^f$ denote? Back: Floating-point multiplication. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of $x *^f* y$? Back: $Round(x * y)$ where $Round$ refers to the current rounding-mode. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is $*^f$ commutative? Back: Yes. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Is $*^f$ associative? Back: No. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the multiplicative identity of $*^f$? Back: $1.0$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Does $*^f$ distribute over $+^f$? Back: No. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What property of floating-point values prevents it behaving like "real math"? Back: It represents a finite number of values and rounds results if need be. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is precision affected when casting from `float` to `double`? Back: It isn't. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic How is precision affected when casting from `double` to `float`? Back: Rounding may occur. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* might rounding occur when casting from `double` to `float`? Back: `float`s have less precision. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What overflow values might result when casting from `float` to `double`? Back: N/A Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What overflow values might result when casting from `double` to `float`? Back: $\pm\infty$ Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic *Why* might overflow occur when casting from `double` to `float`? Back: `float`s have smaller range. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Assuming no overflow, what is the result of casting a `double` to an `int`? Back: The `double`'s value rounded toward `0`. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Assuming overflow, what is the result of casting a `double` to an `int`? Back: The result is implementation-specific. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Assuming no overflow, what is the result of casting a `float` to an `int`? Back: The `float`'s value rounded toward `0`. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of `(int) (double) 1.5`? Back: `1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic What is the result of `(int) (double) -1.5`? Back: `-1` Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% %%ANKI Basic Assuming overflow, what is the result of casting a `float` to an `int`? Back: The result is implementation-specific. Reference: Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. END%% ## References * Bryant, Randal E., and David O'Hallaron. *Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective*. Third edition, Global edition. Always Learning. Pearson, 2016. * “Scientific Notation.” In _Wikipedia_, March 6, 2024. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scientific_notation&oldid=1212169750).