Literals/Floating point: Difference between revisions

m
→‎{{header|Wren}}: Changed to Wren S/H
(Added Julia language)
m (→‎{{header|Wren}}: Changed to Wren S/H)
 
(41 intermediate revisions by 25 users not shown)
Line 14:
*   [[Extreme floating point values]]
<br><br>
 
=={{header|11l}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="11l">// 64-bit floating point literals:
2.3
0.3e+34
 
// single precision (32-bit) floating point literals:
2.3s
0.3e+34s</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|360 Assembly}}==
[[wp:IBM_hexadecimal_floating_point|IBM hexadecimal floating point]]
<syntaxhighlight lang="360asm">XS4 DC E'1.23456E-4' short floating-point
XDPI DC D'3.141592653589793' long floating-point
XD1 DC D'0' long floating-point
XD2 DC D'1' long floating-point
XD3 DC D'-1' long floating-point
XD4 DC D'1.2345E-4' long floating-point
 
XQPI DC L'3.14159265358979323846264338327950' extended
 
* short floating-point - 32 bits - 4 bytes : 6 decimal digits
* long floating-point - 64 bits - 8 bytes : 16 decimal digits
* extended floating-point - 128 bits - 16 bytes : 33 decimal digits
 
* absolute approximate range: 5e-79 to 7e75 </syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|6502 Assembly}}==
You'll have to do it the hard way unfortunately. I used an IEEE-754 floating point calculator to figure this out.
<syntaxhighlight lang="6502asm">byte $DB,$0F,$49,$40 ;3.141592654</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|68000 Assembly}}==
If you don't have a floating-point unit, floats aren't of very much use. The most portable way to declare float literals is also the most tedious: by storing their hexadecimal representation as data.
<syntaxhighlight lang="68000devpac">Pi:
DC.L $40490FDB</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Ada}}==
Real literals contain decimal point. The exponent part is optional. Underline may be used to separate groups of digits. A literal does not have sign, + or - are unary operations. Examples of real literals:
<syntaxhighlight lang="ada">
<lang Ada>
3.141_592_6
1.0E-12
0.13
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Aime}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="aime">3.14
5.0
8r # without the "r"(eal) suffix, "8" would be an integer
.125</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|ALGOL 68}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="algol68"># floating point literals are called REAL denotations in Algol 68 #
# They have the following forms: #
# 1: a digit sequence followed by "." followed by a digit sequence #
Line 54 ⟶ 90:
r := 3.142e-23;
r := 1 234 567 . 9 e - 4;
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|ALGOL W}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="algolw">begin
real r; long real lr;
% floating point literals have the following forms: %
Line 80 ⟶ 116:
r := 7;
lr := 5.4321L;
end.</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Applesoft BASIC}}==
Line 96 ⟶ 132:
-6.66E-32
</pre>
 
=={{header|Arturo}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="rebol">pi: 3.14
print [pi "->" type pi]</syntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
 
<pre>3.14 -> :floating</pre>
 
=={{header|AWK}}==
With the One True Awk ([[nawk]]), all numbers are floating-point. A numeric literal consists of one or more digits '0-9', with an optional decimal point '.', followed by an optional exponent. The exponent is a letter 'E' or 'e', then an optional '+' or '-' sign, then one or more digits '0-9'.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="awk">2
2.
.3
Line 106 ⟶ 150:
45e+6
78e-9
1.2E34</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Other implementations of Awk can differ. They might not use floating-point numbers for integers.
Line 112 ⟶ 156:
This Awk program will detect whether each line of input contains a valid integer.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="awk">/^([0-9]+(\.[0-9]*)?|\.[0-9]+)([Ee][-+]?[0-9]+)?$/ {
print $0 " is a literal number."
next
Line 119 ⟶ 163:
{
print $0 " is not valid."
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
A leading plus or minus sign (as in <tt>+23</tt> or <tt>-14</tt>) is not part of the literal; it is a unary operator. This is easy to check if you know that exponentiation has a higher precedence than unary minus; <tt>-14 ** 2</tt> acts like <tt>-(14 ** 2)</tt>, not like <tt>(-14) ** 2</tt>.
Line 125 ⟶ 169:
=={{header|Axe}}==
Axe does not support floating point literals. However, it does support converting floats to integers and vice versa.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="axe">123→float{L₁}
float{L₁}→I</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Axe does, however, support fixed-point literals.
<syntaxhighlight lang ="axe">12.25→A</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
There are some mathematical operators in Axe that operate specifically on fixed-point numbers.
 
=={{header|BBC BASIC}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="bbcbasic"> REM Floating-point literal syntax:
REM [-]{digit}[.]{digit}[E[-]{digit}]
Line 146 ⟶ 190:
PRINT 8.9E
PRINT .33E-
PRINT -.</langsyntaxhighlight>
'''Output:'''
<pre>
Line 173 ⟶ 217:
=={{header|C sharp}}==
Floating point suffixes are not case-sensitive.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="csharp">double d = 1;
d = 1d;
d = 1D;
Line 197 ⟶ 241:
m = 12e-12m;
m = 12E-12m;
m = 1_234e-1_2m;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|C++}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">#include <iostream>
 
int main()
{
// a numeric literal with decimal point is a double
auto double1 = 2.5;
 
// an 'f' of 'F' suffix means the literal is a flaot
auto float1 = 2.5f;
 
// an 'l' or 'L' suffix means a long double
auto longdouble1 = 2.5l;
 
// a number after an 'e' or 'E' is the base 10 exponent
auto double2 = 2.5e-3;
auto float2 = 2.5e3f;
 
// a '0x' prefix means the literal is hexadecimal. the 'p' is base 2 the exponent
auto double3 = 0x1p4;
auto float3 = 0xbeefp-8f;
 
std::cout << "\ndouble1: " << double1;
std::cout << "\nfloat1: " << float1;
std::cout << "\nlongdouble1: " << longdouble1;
std::cout << "\ndouble2: " << double2;
std::cout << "\nfloat2: " << float2;
std::cout << "\ndouble3: " << double3;
std::cout << "\nfloat3: " << float3;
std::cout << "\n";
}</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
double1: 2.5
float1: 2.5
longdouble1: 2.5
double2: 0.0025
float2: 2500
double3: 16
float3: 190.934
</pre>
 
=={{header|Clojure}}==
Line 265 ⟶ 351:
=={{header|D}}==
D built-in floating point types include ''float'' (32-bit), ''double'' (64-bit) and ''real'' (machine hardware maximum precision floating point type, 80-bit on x86 machine) and respective complex number types. Here's information for [http://www.d-programming-language.org/lex.html#floatliteral Floating Literals].
 
=={{header|Delphi}}==
{{works with|Delphi|6.0}}
{{libheader|SysUtils,StdCtrls}}
 
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="Delphi">
procedure FloatLiterals(Memo: TMemo);
{Delphi has multiple floating number formats}
var R48: Real48; {48-bit real number}
var SI: Single; {32-bit real number}
var D: Double; {64-bit real number}
var E: Extended; {80-bit real number}
var Cmp: Comp; {}
var Cur: Currency; {Fixed point number for currency}
begin
{Various formats that can be used on input or
as constants assigned to various reals.
Pascal automaically converts integer to
reals as long as the real has enough precision
to hold the value. Consequently, all of the
following constants can be assigned to a real.}
D:=1234;
D:=1.234;
D:=1234E-4;
D:=$7F;
{Reals can also be output in various formats.}
D:=123456789.1234;
Memo.Lines.Add(FloatToStrF(D,ffGeneral,18,4));
Memo.Lines.Add(FloatToStrF(D,ffExponent,18,4));
Memo.Lines.Add(FloatToStrF(D,ffFixed,18,4));
Memo.Lines.Add(FloatToStrF(D,ffNumber,18,4));
Memo.Lines.Add(FloatToStrF(D,ffCurrency,18,4));
Memo.Lines.Add(Format('%10.4f',[D]));
end;
 
 
</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
123456789.123400003
1.23456789123400003E+8
123456789.1234
123,456,789.1234
$123,456,789.1234
123456789.1234
 
</pre>
 
 
=={{header|Dyalect}}==
 
Dyalect built-in types include only one floating point number of type ''Float'' (64-bit). Both regular and scientific notations are supported:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="dyalect">var x = 42.02
var y = 0.174e-17</syntaxhighlight>
 
EBNF grammar for the floating point number is as follows:
 
<pre>float = "." digit { digit } [ ("e"|"E") [ "+" | "-" ] digit { digit } ]
| digit { digit }
(
"." digit { digit } [ ( "e" | "E" ) ["+" | "-" ] digit { digit } ]
| ( "e" | "E") ["+" | "-" ] digit { digit }
).</pre>
 
=={{header|EasyLang}}==
EasyLang's ability to use hexadecimal literals and floating-point numbers with "E" is undocumented.
<syntaxhighlight lang="easylang">
decimal = 57.1
decimalWithE = 5710E-2
hexadecimal = 0x39.1999999999
print decimal
print decimalWithE
print hexadecimal
</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
57.10
57.10
57.10
</pre>
 
=={{header|Eiffel}}==
Floating point literals are of the form D.DeSD, where D represents a sequence of decimal digits, and S represents an optional sign. A leading "+" or "-" indicates a unary plus or minus feature and is not considered part of the literal.
 
'''Examples:'''<langsyntaxhighlight Eiffellang="eiffel">
1.
1.23
Line 275 ⟶ 443:
.5
1.23E4
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Elena}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="elena">real r := 1.;
r := 23.2r.2;
r := 1.2e+11r.;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Elixir}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="elixir">iex(180)> 0.123
0.123
iex(181)> -123.4
Line 301 ⟶ 470:
 
iex(187)> 1e4
** (SyntaxError) iex:187: syntax error before: e4</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Erlang}}==
Line 307 ⟶ 476:
 
=={{header|Euphoria}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="euphoria">
printf(1,"Exponential:\t%e, %e, %e, %e\n",{-10.1246,10.2356,16.123456789,64.12})
printf(1,"Floating Point\t%03.3f, %04.3f, %+3.3f, %3.3f\n",{-10.1246,10.2356,16.123456789,64.12})
printf(1,"Floating Point or Exponential: %g, %g, %g, %g\n",{10,16.123456789,64,123456789.123})
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 318 ⟶ 487:
Floating Point or Exponential: 10, 16.1235, 64, 1.23457e+008
</pre>
 
=={{header|Factor}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="factor">3.14 ! basic float
+3.14 ! Optional signs
-3.14
10e5 ! exponents signified by e or E
10E+5 ! with optional signs
+10e-5
1. ! equivalent to 1.0
.5 ! equivalent to 0.5
1/2. ! floating point approximation of a ratio (0.5)
1/3. ! 0.3333333333333333
1/0. ! positive infinity
-1/0. ! negative infinity
0/0. ! not-a-number
! hexadecimal, octal, and binary float literals are supported.
! they require a base 2 exponent expressed as a decimal
! preceded by p or P.
0x1.0p3 ! 8.0
-0x1.0P-3 ! -0.125
0b1.010001p3 ! 10.125
0o1.21p3 ! 10.125
! comma separators are allowed
1,234.123,456 ! 1234.123456
 
 
! normalized hex form ±0x1.MMMMMMMMMMMMMp±EEEE allows any floating-point
! number to be specified precisely according to IEEE 754 representation
+0x1.1234567891234p+0002 ! 4.28444444440952</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Fennel}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="fennel">;;Numeric literals with a decimal component are treated as floating point.
3.14159 ;3.14159
 
;;An exponent can be specified via "e" or "E" and is always floating point.
2.3456e7 ;23456000.0
 
;;Hexadecimal literals are supported, including exponents via "p" or "P".
0x1234.abcd ;4660.6710968018
0x1234.56p3 ;37282.6875
 
;;Underscores can optionally be used to split numbers into readable chunks.
123_456.789 ;123456.789
0x1234_5678.9a ;305419896.60156</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Forth}}==
Line 368 ⟶ 581:
Some examples, taken from the language documentation follow:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="freebasic">' FB 1.05.0 Win64 (default dialect)
 
Dim a As Double = 123.456
Line 381 ⟶ 594:
Dim j As Single = -123.456e-7f
Dim k As Double = 0#
Dim l As Double = 3.141592653589e3#</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|FutureBasic}}==
FB can express floating point literals in several ways.
<syntaxhighlight lang="futurebasic">
local fn DoIt
print "Single:"
single s = 1.0 : print s
s = 123.456 : print s
s = -123.0 : print s
s = 43.1e+5 : print s
s = 43.1E5 : print s
s = 3.1 : print s
s = -123.456e-2 : print s
s = 3.141592653589e3 : print s
print
 
print "Double"
double d = 1.0 : print d
d = 123.456 : print d
d = -123.0 : print d
d = 43.1e+13 : print d
d = 43.1E13 : print d
d = 3.1 : print d
d = -123.456e-7 : print d
d = 3.141592653589e3 : print d
print
 
print "Float:"
float f = 1.0 : print f
f = 123.456 : print f
f = -123.0 : print f
f = 43.1e+5 : print f
f = 43.1E5 : print f
f = 3.1 : print f
f = -123.456e-2 : print f
f = 3.141592653589e3 : print f
print
 
print "CFNumberRef:"
CFNumberRef c = @1.0 : print c
c = @123.456 : print c
c = @-123.0 : print c
c = @43.1e+13 : print c
c = @743.1E13 : print c
c = @3.1 : print c
c = @-123.456e-7 : print c
c = @3.141592653589e37 : print c
end fn
 
fn DoIt
 
HandleEvents
</syntaxhighlight>
{{output}}
<pre>
Single:
1
123.456
-123
4310000
4310000
3.1
-1.23456
3141.593
 
Double
1
123.456
-123
431000000000000
431000000000000
3.1
-1.23456e-05
3141.592653589
 
Float:
1
123.456
-123
4310000
4310000
3.1
-1.23456
3141.593
 
CFNumberRef:
1
123.456
-123
431000000000000
7431000000000000
3.1
-1.23456e-05
3.141592653589e+37
</pre>
 
=={{header|GAP}}==
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="gap">-3.14
22.03e4
4.54e-5</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|gecho}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="gecho">
0.0
-1
Line 396 ⟶ 704:
-1.4324
3 4 /
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Go}}==
See [http://golang.org/doc/go_spec.html#Floating-point_literals relevant section] of language reference. Basically they are base 10, need either a decimal point or an exponent, and specify no precision or representation. The exponent can be signed, but the mantissa is not. One of the integer part or the fractional part may be elided; one of the decimal point or the exponent may be elided. A leading minus sign would be an operator and not part of the floating point literal. Examples,
<pre>0.
0.0
.0
1e3
1e-300
Line 407 ⟶ 717:
=={{header|Groovy}}==
Solution:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="groovy">println 1.00f // float (IEEE-32)
println 1.00d // double (IEEE-64)
println 1.00 // BigDecimal (scaled BigInteger)
Line 417 ⟶ 727:
assert 1.00 instanceof BigDecimal
assert 1.00g instanceof BigDecimal
assert 1.00e0 instanceof BigDecimal</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
Line 429 ⟶ 739:
Haskell supports decimal representation of float literals, with or without an exponent. For more information, see the [http://www.haskell.org/onlinereport/lexemes.html#sect2.5 relevant portion] of the Haskell 98 Report.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="haskell">main = print [0.1,23.3,35e-1,56E+2,14.67e1]
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
Output:
Line 439 ⟶ 749:
 
The program below shows a full range of valid real literals.
<langsyntaxhighlight Iconlang="icon">procedure main()
every write( ![ 1., .1, 0.1, 2e10, 2E10, 3e-1, .4e2, 1.41e2, 8.e+3, 3.141e43 ])
end</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
The function write will cause the real values to be coerced as string constants. Icon/Unicon will format these as it sees fit resorting to exponent forms only where needed.
{{libheader|Icon Programming Library}}
[http://www.cs.arizona.edu/icon/library/src/procs/printf The IPL library routine printf provides a broader range of formatting choices.]
 
=={{header|J}}==
Line 455 ⟶ 765:
Here is an informal bnf for J's numeric constant language. Note, however, that the implementation may disallow some unusual cases -- cases which are not treated as exceptional here (for example, the [http://jsoftware.com/help/dictionary/dcons.htm language specification] allows 1.2e3.4 but the current implementation does not support fractional powers of 10 in numeric constants):
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="bnf">numeric-constant ::= number-constant | number-constant whitespace numeric-constant
whitespace ::= whitespacecharacter | whitespacecharacter whitespace
whitespacecharacter ::= ' ' | TAB
Line 477 ⟶ 787:
signed-digits ::= digits | '_' digits
digits ::= digit | digit digits
digit ::= '0'|'1'|'2'|'3'|'4'|'5'|'6'|'7'|'8'|'9'</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
e indicates exponential or scientific notation (number on left multiplied by 10 raised to power indicated by number on right)
Line 491 ⟶ 801:
Floating point examples:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="j"> 0 1 _2 3.4 3e4 3p4 3x4
0 1 _2 3.4 30000 292.227 163.794
16bcafe.babe _16b_cafe.babe _10b11
51966.7 46818.7 _9</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Note that all the values in an array are the same type, thus the 0, 1 and 2 in the above example are floating point because they do not appear by themselves. Note also that by default J displays no more than six significant digits of floating point values.
 
=={{header|jq}}==
jq floating point literals are identical to JSON floating point literals. However, when jq parses a floating point or integer literal, conversion to IEEE 754 numbers takes place, which may result in a loss of accuracy and/or an apparent change of type, as illustrated by the following sequence of input => output pairs:
<lang sh>1.0 => 1
1.2 => 1.2
1e10 => 10000000000
1e100 => 1e+100
1e1234 => 1.7976931348623157e+308
.1 => 0.1
.1e1 => 1</lang>
 
=={{header|Java}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="java">1. //double equal to 1.0
1.0 //double
2432311.7567374 //double
Line 521 ⟶ 821:
1.0F //float
1 / 2. //double
1 / 2 //int equal to 0</langsyntaxhighlight>
Values that are outside the bounds of a type will give compiler errors when trying to force them to that type.
 
=={{header|jq}}==
jq floating point literals are identical to JSON floating point literals. However, when jq parses a floating point or integer literal, conversion to IEEE 754 numbers takes place, which may result in a loss of accuracy and/or an apparent change of type, as illustrated by the following sequence of input => output pairs:
<syntaxhighlight lang="sh">1.0 => 1
1.2 => 1.2
1e10 => 10000000000
1e100 => 1e+100
1e1234 => 1.7976931348623157e+308
.1 => 0.1
.1e1 => 1</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Julia}}==
{{works with|Julia|0.6}}
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="julia">0.1
.1
1.
Line 533 ⟶ 843:
1e+10
1e-10
0x01p-1 # hex float</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Kotlin}}==
There are two floating point types: Double (64 bits) and Float (32 bits). The default floating point type is Double.
<lang scala>val d: Double = 1.0
 
val d2: Double = 1.234e-10
Double literals must end with a decimal point with at least one digit after it, and/or a scientific notation suffix made with <code>e</code> (or <code>E</code>) followed by an integer literal.
val f: Float = 728832f
 
val f2: Float = 728832F</lang>
A Float literal is made by appending <code>f</code> (or <code>F</code>) to a Double or Int literal (see [[Literals/Integer#Kotlin|integer literals]]).
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="kotlin">
val d = 1.0 // Double
val d2 = 1.234e-10 // Double
val f = 728832f // Float
val f2 = 7.28832e5F // Float
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Lasso}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="lasso">0.0
<lang Lasso>0.0
0.1
-0.1
1.2e3
1.3e+3
1.2e-3</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Lingo}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="lingo">put 0.23
-- 0.2300
 
Line 572 ⟶ 890:
-- casting string to float
put float("0.23")
-- 0.23000000</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Lua}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="lua">3.14159
314.159E-2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|M2000 Interpreter}}==
We can use Decimal using @ and Currency using # (no exponent part, both types)
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="m2000 interpreter">
Def ExpType$(x)=Type$(x)
Print ExpType$(-12)="Double", -12
Print ExpType$(12.)="Double", 12.
Print ExpType$(12.e-5)="Double", 12.e-5
Print ExpType$(.1)="Double", .1
Print ExpType$(-12~)="Single", -12~
Print ExpType$(12.~)="Single", 12.~
Print ExpType$(12.e-5~)="Single", 12.e-5~
Print ExpType$(.1~)="Single", .1~
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Maple}}==
Maple distinguishes "software floats" (of arbitrary precision) and "hardware floats" (of machine precision). To get the latter, use the "HFloat" constructor.
<syntaxhighlight lang="maple">
<lang Maple>
> 123.456; # decimal notation
123.456
Line 629 ⟶ 962:
> Float(undefined); # "NaN", not-a-number
Float(undefined)
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
Whether a given float is a software or hardware float can be determined by using "type".
<syntaxhighlight lang="maple">
<lang Maple>
> type( 2.3, 'hfloat' );
false
Line 637 ⟶ 970:
> type( HFloat( 2.3 ), 'hfloat' );
true
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
(There is also a type "sfloat" for software floats, and the type "float", which covers both.)
 
=={{header|Mathematica}}/{{header|Wolfram Language}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Mathematicalang="mathematica">These numbers are given in the default output format. Large numbers are given in scientific notation.
{6.7^-4,6.7^6,6.7^8}
{0.00049625,90458.4,4.06068*10^6}
Line 655 ⟶ 988:
In accounting form, negative numbers are given in parentheses, and scientific notation is never used.
AccountingForm[{5.6,-6.7,10.^7}]
{5.6,(6.7),10000000.}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Maxima}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="maxima">/* Maxima has machine floating point (usually double precision IEEE 754), and
arbitrary length "big floats" */
 
Line 677 ⟶ 1,010:
 
bfloat(%pi);
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197b0</langsyntaxhighlight>
=={{header|MIPS Assembly}}==
Ultimately it depends on the assembler, however, it's standard to allow simple expressions like "2.5". Since MIPS uses a floating-point coprocessor with separate registers, the assembler understands that you're trying to load a float into the register rather than an integer, and so the assembler will calculate the IEEE-754 hexadecimal representation for you.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="mips">li.s f0,2.5 ;loads the single-precision float 2.5 (0x40200000) into register f0</syntaxhighlight>
 
Defining literal float data in your code also depends on the assembler. If all else fails, you can use a calculator to get the IEEE-754 hexadecimal representation of the desired float and store it as an "integer."
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="mips">la $t0,pi
lwc1 $f0,0($t0) ;load pi into $f0
 
li $v0,10 ;exit command
syscall ;return to linux
 
pi:
.word 0x40490FDB ;IEEE-754 representation of 3.1415927</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Nemerle}}==
Line 720 ⟶ 1,068:
it's built in ''Rexx'' object and any other Java object that supports floating point numbers.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight NetRexxlang="netrexx">/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref symbols nobinary
 
Line 768 ⟶ 1,116:
method normalize(fv) private constant
return fv + 0
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
'''Output:'''
<pre>
Line 800 ⟶ 1,148:
 
=={{header|Nim}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="nim">var x: float
x = 2.3
x = 2.0
Line 812 ⟶ 1,160:
var y = 2'f32 # Automatically a float32
var z = 2'f64 # Automatically a float64
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Objeck}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="objeck">
3 + .14159
3.14159
314.159E-2
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|OCaml}}==
Line 829 ⟶ 1,177:
Here are some examples:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ocaml">0.5
1.0
1. (* it is not possible to write only "1" because OCaml is strongly typed,
and this would be interpreted as an integer *)
1e-10
3.14159_26535_89793</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Oforth}}==
Line 840 ⟶ 1,188:
A literal floating point number is written with a . and with or without an exponential notation :
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="oforth">3.14
<lang Oforth>3.14
1.0e-12
0.13
1000.0
.22</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|PARI/GP}}==
Line 862 ⟶ 1,210:
|}
where <math>\epsilon</math> is the machine epsilon at the selected precision. The minimum value is the opposite of the maximum value (reverse the sign bit).
<pre>0.0
0. \\ == 0.0
.0 \\ == 0.0
. \\ == 0.0
2e2
6.02e23
-2e48
1e-9
1e0</pre>
 
=={{header|Pascal}}==
Line 871 ⟶ 1,228:
 
=={{header|Perl}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="perl"># Standard notations:
.5;
0.5;
Line 878 ⟶ 1,235:
# The numbers can be grouped:
100_000_000; # equals to 100000000
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Perl 6}}==
Floating point numbers (the Num type) are written in the standard 'e' scientific notation:
<lang perl6>2e2 # same as 200e0, 2e2, 200.0e0 and 2.0e2
6.02e23
-2e48
1e-9
1e0</lang>
 
A number like <tt>3.1416</tt> is specifically not floating point, but rational (the Rat type), equivalent to <tt>3927/1250</tt>. On the other hand, <tt>Num(3.1416)</tt> would be considered a floating literal though by virtue of mandatory constant folding.
 
=={{header|Phix}}==
{{libheader|Phix/basics}}
Phix does not require any distinction between integers and floats: 5 and 5.0 are exactly the same.
A variable declared as atom can hold an integer or a floating point value.<br>
Line 901 ⟶ 1,249:
and on a 64-bit architecture they can range from approximately -1e4932 to +1e4932 with 19 decimal digits.<br>
The included bigatom library allows working with extremely large integers and floats with arbitrary precision. In the following, '?x' is the Phix shorthand for 'print(1,x)', plus \n
<!--<syntaxhighlight lang="phix">-->
<lang Phix>?1e+12 -- (same as 1e12)
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?</span><span style="color: #000000;">1e+12</span> <span style="color: #000080;font-style:italic;">-- (same as 1e12)</span>
?1e-12
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?</span><span style="color: #000000;">1e-12</span>
?5 -- (same as 5.0)
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?</span><span style="color: #000000;">5</span> <span style="color: #000080;font-style:italic;">-- (same as 5.0)
--?1. -- (illegal, use 1 or 1.0)
--?.1 . -- (sameillegal, asuse 0.1 or 1.0)</span>
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?.</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span> <span style="color: #000080;font-style:italic;">-- (same as 0.1)</span>
?1/3 -- 0.333333
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">/</span><span style="color: #000000;">3</span> <span style="color: #000080;font-style:italic;">-- 0.333333</span>
printf(1,"%g %G\n",1e-30)</lang>
<span style="color: #7060A8;">printf</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">(</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #008000;">"%g %G\n"</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #000000;">1e-30</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">)</span>
<!--</syntaxhighlight>-->
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 920 ⟶ 1,270:
=={{header|PHP}}==
More [http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.float.php information] about floating point numbers in PHP.
<syntaxhighlight lang="php">.12
<lang PHP>.12
0.1234
1.2e3
7E-10
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
Formal representation:
<pre>
Line 931 ⟶ 1,281:
EXPONENT_DNUM [+-]?(({LNUM} | {DNUM}) [eE][+-]? {LNUM})
</pre>
 
=={{header|Picat}}==
<pre>2.0 % normal float. Must have a decimal after the decimal point
-2.1
2.01E3 % exponent can be E of e
2.01e3
2.01E-3
2.01e-3
1_000_123.123_456 % underscores can be used for clarity
</pre>
 
Precision for floats is 15. (Integers has arbitrary precision.)
 
 
=={{header|PicoLisp}}==
Line 939 ⟶ 1,302:
 
=={{header|PL/I}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="pl/i">
<lang PL/I>
1.2345e-4 decimal floating-point
7e5 decimal floating-point
Line 950 ⟶ 1,313:
or 7.3125 * 2**7
1e5b binary floating-point equals 1 * 2**5
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|PureBasic}}==
Line 961 ⟶ 1,324:
This is an excerpt of an ANTLR grammar for python obtained from [http://www.antlr.org/grammar/1200715779785/Python.g here].
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ebnf">FLOAT
: '.' DIGITS (Exponent)?
| DIGITS '.' Exponent
Line 971 ⟶ 1,334:
Exponent
: ('e' | 'E') ( '+' | '-' )? DIGITS
;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Examples
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="python">
2.3 # 2.2999999999999998
.3 # 0.29999999999999999
Line 981 ⟶ 1,344:
.3e-34 # 2.9999999999999999e-35
2.e34 # 1.9999999999999999e+34
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Quackery}}==
 
Quackery does not support floating point, but it runs on top of Python, which does. So we can reach down into Python and pass floating point numbers back and forth. Here is a cheap but effective way of doing so. We will represent floating point numbers in Quackery as strings. The task requirements are fulfilled by [[Literals/Floating point#Python|the Python entry]].
 
<code>isfloat</code> conforms that a string is a float by asking Python to validate it.
 
<code>f</code> adds a sprinkle of syntactic sugar to the Quackery compiler so we can say <code>f 0.5</code> rather that <code>$ "0.5"</code>. (Builders – words defined with <code>builds</code> rather than <code>is</code> – are extensions to the Quackery compiler.)
 
<code>sin</code>returns the sine of an angle expressed in radians, so that we can demonstrate usage of <code>f</code> here.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="Quackery"> [ $ \
try:
float(string_from_stack())
except:
to_stack(False)
else:
to_stack(True)
\ python ] is isfloat ( $ --> b )
 
[ nextword
dup isfloat not if
[ $ '"f" needs to be followed by a number.'
message put bail ]
' [ ' ] swap nested join
nested swap dip join ] builds f ( [ $ --> [ $ )
 
[ $ \
import math
a = string_from_stack()
a = str(math.sin(float(a)))
string_to_stack(a) \ python ] is sin ( $ --> $ )
</syntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
 
Demonstrating usage as a dialogue in the Quackery shell (REPL).
 
<pre>/O> f 0.5
... dup echo$ cr
... sin echo$ cr
...
0.5
0.479425538604203
</pre>
 
=={{header|Racket}}==
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="racket">
#lang racket
.2
Line 995 ⟶ 1,403:
2.0f0 ; single float
1.0t0 ; extended 80-bit float (when available on platform)
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
Output:
Line 1,008 ⟶ 1,416:
1.0t0
</pre>
 
=={{header|Raku}}==
(formerly Perl 6)
Floating point numbers (the Num type) are written in the standard 'e' scientific notation:
<syntaxhighlight lang="raku" line>2e2 # same as 200e0, 2e2, 200.0e0 and 2.0e2
6.02e23
-2e48
1e-9
1e0</syntaxhighlight>
 
A number like <tt>3.1416</tt> is specifically not floating point, but rational (the Rat type), equivalent to <tt>3927/1250</tt>. On the other hand, <tt>Num(3.1416)</tt> would be considered a floating literal though by virtue of mandatory constant folding.
 
=={{header|REXX}}==
All values in REXX are character strings, &nbsp; so a value could hold such things as these (decimal) numbers:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="rexx">something = 127
something = '127' /*exactly the same as the above. */
something = 1.27e2
something = 1.27E2
something = 1.27E+2
something = ' + 0001.27e+00000000000000002 '</langsyntaxhighlight>
To forcibly express a value in exponential notation, &nbsp; REXX has a built-in function &nbsp; '''format''' &nbsp; that can be used.
 
Line 1,024 ⟶ 1,443:
</pre>
by the &nbsp; '''format''' &nbsp; BIF.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="rexx">something = -.00478
say something
say format(something,,,,0)</langsyntaxhighlight>
'''output'''
<pre>
Line 1,035 ⟶ 1,454:
 
There are other options for the &nbsp; '''format''' &nbsp; BIF to force any number of digits before and/or after the decimal point, &nbsp; and/or specifying the number of digits in the exponent. <br><br>
 
=={{header|RPL}}==
Floating point numbers exist only in decimal format. They can be entered using the scientific format: <code>3.1416E2</code> is equivalent to <code>314.16</code>.
Display can be forced to <code>SCI</code>entific or "<code>ENG</code>ineering" format (the exponent being a multiple of 3), with a defined number of digits after the decimal point of the mantissa:
1: { 123.45 0.012345 }
3 SCI
1: { 1.235E+02 1.245E-02 }
3 ENG
1: { 123.5E0 12.45E-3 }
 
=={{header|Ruby}}==
Line 1,043 ⟶ 1,471:
 
=={{header|Rust}}==
The fractional part may be elided (so 1. is valid) but the integer part may not (so .0 is not valid).
<lang rust>2.3 // Normal floating point literal
<syntaxhighlight lang="rust">2.3 // Normal floating point literal
3. // Equivalent to 3.0 (3 would be interpreted as an integer)
2f64 // The type (in this case f64, a 64-bit floating point number) may be appended to the value
1_000.2_f32 // Underscores may appear anywhere in the number for clarity.</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Scala}}==
{{libheader|Scala}}
As all values in Scala, values are boxed with wrapper classes. The compiler will unbox them to primitive types for run-time execution.
<langsyntaxhighlight Scalalang="scala">1. //Double equal to 1.0
1.0 //Double, a 64-bit IEEE-754 floating point number (equivalent to Java's double primitive type)
2432311.7567374 //Double
Line 1,075 ⟶ 1,504:
Double.PositiveInfinity
Double.NegativeInfinity
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
Values that are outside the bounds of a type will give compiler-time errors when trying to force them to that type.
 
=={{header|Scheme}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="scheme">
.2 ; 0.2
2. ; 2.0
Line 1,089 ⟶ 1,518:
; #t
(inexact? 2)
; #f</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Seed7}}==
The type [http://seed7.sourceforge.net/libraries/float.htm float] consists of single precision floating point numbers. Float literals are base 10 and contain a decimal point. There must be at least one digit before and after the decimal point. An exponent part, which is introduced with E or e, is optional. The exponent can be signed, but the mantissa is not. A literal does not have a sign, + or - are unary operations. Examples of float literals are:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="seed7">
3.14159265358979
1.0E-12
0.1234
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
The functions [http://seed7.sourceforge.net/libraries/float.htm#str%28ref_float%29 str] and the operators [http://seed7.sourceforge.net/libraries/float.htm#%28ref_float%29digits%28ref_integer%29 digits] and [http://seed7.sourceforge.net/libraries/float.htm#%28attr_float%29parse%28in_string%29 parse] create and accept float literals with sign.
 
Line 1,103 ⟶ 1,532:
 
=={{header|Sidef}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ruby">say 1.234;
say .1234;
say 1234e-5;
say 12.34e5;</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>1.234
Line 1,114 ⟶ 1,543:
 
=={{header|Smalltalk}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="smalltalk">2.0
45e6
45e+6
78e-9
1.2E34</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
base 2 mantissa:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="smalltalk">2r1010.0 -> 10.0
2r0.01 -> 0.25
2r1010e5 -> 320.0. "hint: = 10*(2ˆ5)"</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
base 2 mantissa and base 2 exponent:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="smalltalk">2r1010e2r0101 -> 320.0 "hint: = 10*(2ˆ5)"</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Complex numbers:
<syntaxhighlight lang="smalltalk">3.1i
2.0+4.5i</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Stata}}==
Only decimal floating-point are supported, computations are done in double precision (but storage can be made in integer or single floating-point as well).
 
Examples:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="stata">.3
1.5
-1.5e10
3.15e-100</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Swift}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Swiftlang="swift">let double = 1.0 as Double // Double precision
let float = 1.0 as Float // Single precision
let scientific = 1.0E-12
Line 1,145 ⟶ 1,579:
 
let div = 1.1 / 2 // Double
let div1 = 1 / 2 // 0</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Tcl}}==
Line 1,160 ⟶ 1,594:
=={{header|Ursa}}==
Cygnus/X Ursa (the standard Ursa interpreter) is written in Java and supports Java style floating-point literals.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ursa">1.
1.0
2432311.7567374
Line 1,170 ⟶ 1,604:
758832D
728832F
1.0F</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Verbexx}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="verbexx">// Floating-point Literals:
//
// If present,the exponent must be of the form:
Line 1,228 ⟶ 1,662:
// Underscores can also appear in the exponent, after the first digit:
 
@SAY -1_E-0__2_f32 1.e+0___5_5____ -1.0_E123_456_789_987_654_321__fD debug:;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Vim Script}}==
Line 1,238 ⟶ 1,672:
 
Note that there must always be at least one digit before and after the period (and for the exponent).
 
=={{header|Visual Basic}}==
{{works with|Visual Basic|5}}
{{works with|Visual Basic|6}}
{{works with|VBA|Access 97}}
{{works with|VBA|6.5}}
{{works with|VBA|7.1}}
<syntaxhighlight lang="vb">Sub Main()
Dim d As Double ' 8 Bytes, type specifier = #
Dim s As Single ' 4 Bytes, type specifier = !
d = -12.3456
d = 1000#
d = 0.00001
d = 67#
d = 8.9
d = 0.33
d = 0#
d = 2# * 10 ^ 3
d = 2E+50
d = 2E-50
s = -12.3456!
s = 1000!
s = 0.00001!
s = 67!
s = 8.9!
s = 0.33!
s = 0!
s = 2! * 10 ^ 3
End Sub</syntaxhighlight>
There is no built-in support for not-a-number, but here's a way to handle that anyway:
<syntaxhighlight lang="vb">Option Explicit
Public Declare Function RtlCompareMemory Lib "ntdll.dll" _
(ByRef Source1 As Any, ByRef Source2 As Any, ByVal Length As Long) As Long
 
Public Function IsNAN(ByRef d As Double) As Boolean
Dim d1 As Double
d1 = NaN()
IsNAN = (RtlCompareMemory(d, d1, 8) = 8)
End Function
 
Public Function NaN() As Double
On Error Resume Next ' ignore the error
NaN = 0 / 0
End Function
 
Sub Main()
Dim d1 As Double
Dim d2 As Double
d1 = NaN()
d2 = d1
Debug.Assert IsNAN(d2)
Debug.Print CStr(d2)
End Sub</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>-1,#IND</pre>
 
=={{header|Wren}}==
Wren has just one kind of floating point literal which must have digits both before and after the decimal point. Forms such as ''123.'' and ''.123'' are not allowed.
 
Negative zero can be represented directly but infinities or NaN cannot.
 
It is also possible to represent floating point numbers using scientific notation.
 
All numbers are instances of the built-in Num class which is always 8 bytes in size. Integers are really just floating point numbers which have no decimal part.
<syntaxhighlight lang="wren">var f = 123.45
var g = 0.12345 // .12345 not allowed
var h = 1.234e2
var i = -0.0
System.print([f, g, h, i])</syntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
<pre>
[123.45, 0.12345, 123.4, -0]
</pre>
 
=={{header|XPL0}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="xpl0">0.
<lang XPL0>0.
.1
1e3
123.456E-300
-123_456_789e+123</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Z80 Assembly}}==
{{trans|6502 Assembly}}
You'll have to do it the hard way unfortunately. I used an IEEE-754 floating point calculator to figure this out.
The Z80 doesn't natively have any commands for floats, so you'll have to do it yourself.
<syntaxhighlight lang="z80">byte &DB,&0F,&49,&40 ;0x40490FDB or 3.141592654 (single-precision)</syntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|zkl}}==
zkl requires something on both sides of the dot for a thing to be a float
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="zkl">1.0, 0.1, 3.1415, 1.e-100, 1.2e100, -1e10, -1e+10, 123.456E-300</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
 
9,476

edits