15

It might be a simple solution but I can not fix it.

I am dividing 2 integers :

finishedGameFinalScore = [score integerValue];
CGFloat interval = 2/finishedGameFinalScore;
NSLog(@"interval = %f",interval);

The log returns 0.000000

Is there a limit for decimal places? I need to preserve the decimal result.

Thanks Shani

4
  • 1
    CGFloat finishedGameFinalScore = [score floatValue]; CGFloat interval = 2.0f/finishedGameFinalScore;
    – janusfidel
    Commented Aug 15, 2012 at 12:30
  • 1
    You have to divide by a floating pointer number to get a floating point number.
    – Joe
    Commented Aug 15, 2012 at 12:31
  • 1
    This is true for every C-based language. Dividing two ints results in an int.
    – borrrden
    Commented Aug 15, 2012 at 12:32
  • Possible duplicate of iOS int always returning 0
    – phuclv
    Commented Oct 31, 2017 at 5:10

4 Answers 4

74

The reason your code doesn't work is that you're dividing an integer by another integer and then casting the result to a float.

So you have 2 (an integer) and some other number (also an integer). Then you divide 2 by this number - which is probably greater than 2. Let's say it's 3.

Integer sees 2/3 and he's like "0.66666667? Pshh, no one ever needs anything after the decimal point anyway". So he truncates it. You just have 0.

Then Integer gives the number to Mr. float and Mr float is super happy to get a number! He's all like "yay, a 0! I'm going to add ALL OF THE SIGNIFICANT DIGITS". And that's how you end up with 0.0000000.

So yeah, just cast to a float first. Or even a double!

enter image description here

1
  • Of even just do CGFloat interval = 2.0/finishedGameFinalScore; (add the .0). As 2.0 is a CGFloat, the result will be a CGFloat keeping all the decimals. Commented Feb 16, 2016 at 15:07
14

@Dustin said u will need to typecast your divider value to float as it goes in float it shows integer value

CASE 1: Typecast

NSString *score = @"3";
 int interval = [str intValue];
 CGFloat interval = (2/(float)interval);
 NSLog(@"interval = %.2f",interval);

CASE 2: No need for typecast

NSString *score = @"3";
 float interval = [str floatValue];
 CGFloat interval = (2/interval);
 NSLog(@"interval = %.2f",interval);
0
8

Just add the f-hint to the number 2. in this case that will do the trick.

CGFloat interval = 2.0f/finishedGameFinalScore;

all the above/below answers are correct and fully explain why this work.

1
  • Normally, you wouldn't add this as a new answer if there are already two answers unless it adds significant important data. You could comment it on the question or another answer if you think it really adds something. But I'll +1 it because you're new.
    – Dustin
    Commented Aug 15, 2012 at 16:40
1

just devide long value from 1.0 and assigned to float variable.

unsigned long l1 = 65536;
unsigned long l2 = 256;
float f = (l1/1.0)/(l2/1.0);

NSLog(@"%f",f);

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