Real data type

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Anarchyte (talk | contribs) at 11:36, 19 November 2016 (removed stale merge tag. discussion was never started). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A real data type is a data type used in a computer program to represent an approximation of a real number. Because the real numbers are not countable, computers cannot represent them exactly using a finite amount of information. Most often, a computer will use a rational approximation to a real number.

Rational numbers

The most general data type for a rational number stores the numerator and denominator as integers.

Fixed point numbers

A "fixed point" data type assumes a specific denominator for all numbers. The denominator here is most often a power of two. For example, in a system whose denominator is 65,536 (216), the hexadecimal number 0x12345678 means 0x12345678/65536 or 305419896/65536 or 4660 + 22136/65536 or about 4660.33777. See fixed-point arithmetic.

Floating point numbers

A "floating point" type is a compromise between the flexibility of a general rational type and the speed of fixed-point arithmetic. It uses some of the bits in the data type to specify a power of two for the denominator. See floating point and IEEE Floating Point Standard.

Decimal numbers

Similar to fixed-point or floating-point numbers, except with a denominator that is a power of 10 instead of a power of 2.