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Possible Duplicate:
The accuracy of PHP float calculate

when i executed the code below in eclipse , the result was not 0 but 5.5511151231258E-17

$a = 0.1+0.2-0.3;
echo $a;

could someone tell me why?

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  • 1
    You do know that 5.5511151231258E-17 means 0.000000000000000055511151231258, right? Just in case you are wondering about the notation...
    – deceze
    Aug 25, 2011 at 5:30
  • echo round($a,15); should work for your purpose Aug 25, 2011 at 5:59

4 Answers 4

7

This is because floating point numbers have limited precision.

You can find more information about this trait on this page in the PHP manual.

Floating point numbers have limited precision. Although it depends on the system, PHP typically uses the IEEE 754 double precision format, which will give a maximum relative error due to rounding in the order of 1.11e-16. Non elementary arithmetic operations may give larger errors, and, of course, error progragation must be considered when several operations are compounded.

Additionally, rational numbers that are exactly representable as floating point numbers in base 10, like 0.1 or 0.7, do not have an exact representation as floating point numbers in base 2, which is used internally, no matter the size of the mantissa. Hence, they cannot be converted into their internal binary counterparts without a small loss of precision. This can lead to confusing results: for example, floor((0.1+0.7)*10) will usually return 7 instead of the expected 8, since the internal representation will be something like 7.9999999999999991118....

So never trust floating number results to the last digit, and never compare floating point numbers for equality. If higher precision is necessary, the arbitrary precision math functions and gmp functions are available.

Please note that this is not a trait specific to PHP; it is just the way floating point numbers work.

1

You're running into PHP's floating point precision issues. All languages have them, you've just found PHP's.

1

This is not PHP specific, as others have mentioned. However, you can avoid limited floating point precision by using round():

<?php
$a = 0.1+0.3-0.2;
echo round($a, 2);
?>

Of course you will need to know the number of digits beforehand.

0

It's because computers can't accurately represent floating point numbers. This isn't specific to PHP.

See here for details.

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