#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
double u = 0;
double w = -u;
cout << w << endl;
return 0;
}
Why does this great piece of code outputs "-0" and not "0", as one would expect?
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Why does this great piece of code outputs "-0" and not "0", as one would expect? |
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The IEEE 754 standard for floating-point numbers has the sign bit separate from the mantissa, which allows for zero to be negative. Wikipedia should be able to help explain this. |
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Because your expectations are wrong. IEEE requires that positive and negative zero be represented seperately. That is what you're seeing here. |
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Because a double can indeed have values -0, +0, -infinity, +infinity and NaN, which can be a result of various interesting expressions, like 0/0. Look here for more information. |
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The IEEE 754 standard for floating point arithmetic makes a distinction between +0 and -0, this can be used when dealing with very small numbers rounded to zero where the sign still has an importance. |
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In IEEE floating point 0 and -0 are both distinct values, from here under "Special Values":
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Take a look at this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point. Note that there is a sign bit, even if the value is zero. |
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Because "negative zero" is a valid number! |
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