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I keep seeing people using doubles in C#. I know I read somewhere that doubles sometimes lose precision. My question is when should a use a double and when should I use a decimal type? Which type is suitable for money computations? (ie. greater than $100 million)

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7 Answers 7

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For money, always decimal. It's why it was created.

If numbers must add up correctly or balance, use decimal. This includes any financial storage or calculations, scores, or other numbers that people might do by hand.

If the exact value of numbers is not important, use double for speed. This includes graphics, physics or other physical sciences computations where there is already a "number of significant digits".

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    It's not that double is inaccurate - it has relative accuracy and can represent very large or small magnitudes that decimal cannot handle at all. Jul 22, 2009 at 15:14
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    Here's why you use Decimal for money: Double's accuracy is only 16 decimal digits, and after just a few arithmetic ops, errors will quickly accumulate large enough to creep into the 15, 14, 13, etc. digits. Rounding to "cents" requires at least one digit of full accuracy after cents digit, but really you should reserve 4 or 5 to insulate from cumulative arithmetic errors, which you CANNOT allow to corrupt the hundredths column you use to round the cents. That leaves you with 16 (total) - 2 (cents) - (4 or 5 error padding) = oh $hit only 7 (or less) reliable integer digits for your money!
    – Triynko
    Mar 21, 2012 at 22:01
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    As a result, I wouldn't manipulate monetary values of more than $9.99 (1 integer digit), because rather than 4 or 5 digits of error accumulation padding, I'd want more like 10 or 11. Since Decimal is a 128-bit number, it gives you that kind of isolation, even with numbers in the hundreds of trillions of dollars, because it has 28-29 digits of accuracy. However, you can't go much higher than that. 999,999,999,999,999.99R (999 trillion) would require 18 digits of accuracy to round properly, and since decimal gives you 28-29, that's only 10 digits of cumulative arithmetic error insulation.
    – Triynko
    Mar 21, 2012 at 22:15
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    Just to rub it in... if you were building a game, would you really care if the barrel of explosives you just catapulted a quarter mile across a field lands a 1/16 of an inch off target because of the cumulative errors over the hundreds of "position + (velocity * time)" steps? I doubt it.
    – Triynko
    Mar 21, 2012 at 22:21
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    To clear this up double does not have 16 digits - that is only the number of meaningful digits. Floats are based around exponents in base 2 math - some base 10 numbers are corrupted because they are an infinite series if converted to a base 2 exp, in binary float math 0.1 * 0.1 != 0.01 because 0.1 cannot be represented exactly. Math operations also lead to drift - add and subtract with dollars and cents and you can get numbers like 0.9999999999999. toString() initially hides this through rounding, but exact comparisons are broken immediately.
    – David
    Mar 27, 2012 at 12:36
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My question is when should a use a double and when should I use a decimal type?

decimal for when you work with values in the range of 10^(+/-28) and where you have expectations about the behaviour based on base 10 representations - basically money.

double for when you need relative accuracy (i.e. losing precision in the trailing digits on large values is not a problem) across wildly different magnitudes - double covers more than 10^(+/-300). Scientific calculations are the best example here.

which type is suitable for money computations?

decimal, decimal, decimal

Accept no substitutes.

The most important factor is that double, being implemented as a binary fraction, cannot accurately represent many decimal fractions (like 0.1) at all and its overall number of digits is smaller since it is 64-bit wide vs. 128-bit for decimal. Finally, financial applications often have to follow specific rounding modes (sometimes mandated by law). decimal supports these; double does not.

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    There is no doubt that double is not to be used when representing financial values, but what did you exactly mean when you wrote that double does not support specific rounding modes, compared to a decimal? AFAIK, Math.Round has overloads which accept the MidpointRounding parameter for both double and decimal?
    – vgru
    Sep 28, 2011 at 12:12
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    @Groo: I guess I must have looked at the .Net 1.1 API, the method was added in 2.0 - but it's still kinda pointless due to the problems with binary fractions. There's an example in the current API doc that illustrates this problem. Sep 28, 2011 at 13:27
  • Saw this line in many comparisions but not able to understand the meaning. Can you kindly elaborate? "Double cannot accurately represent many decimal fractions (like 0.1) at all "
    – Imad
    Jun 24, 2018 at 14:16
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    @lmad: I have a website for that: floating-point-gui.de - basically it's the same reason why decimal numbers cannot accurately represent 1/3 Jun 25, 2018 at 6:31
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    @MichaelBorgwardt when you said "decimal, decimal, decimal", which one should I use? Jan 8, 2019 at 13:08
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According to Characteristics of the floating-point types:

.NET Type C# Keyword Precision
System.Single float ~6-9 digits
System.Double double ~15-17 digits
System.Decimal decimal 28-29 digits

The way I've been stung by using the wrong type (a good few years ago) is with large amounts:

  • £520,532.52 - 8 digits
  • £1,323,523.12 - 9 digits

You run out at 1 million for a float.

A 15 digit monetary value:

  • £1,234,567,890,123.45

9 trillion with a double. But with division and comparisons it's more complicated (I'm definitely no expert in floating point and irrational numbers - see Marc's point). Mixing decimals and doubles causes issues:

A mathematical or comparison operation that uses a floating-point number might not yield the same result if a decimal number is used because the floating-point number might not exactly approximate the decimal number.

When should I use double instead of decimal? has some similar and more in depth answers.

Using double instead of decimal for monetary applications is a micro-optimization - that's the simplest way I look at it.

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Decimal is for exact values. Double is for approximate values.

USD: $12,345.67 USD (Decimal)
CAD: $13,617.27 (Decimal)
Exchange Rate: 1.102932 (Double)
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    Decimal is not for exact values. Decimal provides 28-29 decimal digits of accuracy according to the documentation. Decimal does not perform analytical arithmetic and is therefore not "exact". Decimal is great for money, because even with values in the trillions of dollars, it still leaves you with 10 digits of insulation from cumulative arithmetic error, while still being able to accurately round to cents.
    – Triynko
    Mar 21, 2012 at 22:24
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    Why is the exchange rate double and not decimal? Isn't that also simply the price of 1 USD in CAD?
    – gerrit
    Nov 19, 2012 at 17:28
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    @gerrit An exchange rate is not the "price" of 1 USD in CAD. It is the ratio of the value of the two. Depending on your source determines how many decimal places you'll be given. For example, 1 USD is worth 1.0016 CAD. 1 Great Britian Pound is worth 1.5909 CAD. 1 Vietnamese Dong is worth 0.000048 CAD. It's a ratio as such cannot realistically be truncated anywhere without losing precision.
    – Ian Boyd
    Nov 19, 2012 at 18:33
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    @gerrit The 0.000048 is from the Bank of Canada. XE says one VND is worth 0.0000478405 Canadian. They are calculated as a division; which results in a floating point value.
    – Ian Boyd
    Nov 19, 2012 at 18:41
  • No. Decimal is not exact. And for exchange rate in example above you should use decimal, since input and output are in base 10 (when using double there is loss of precision on base conversion, since there is no 5 in prime factorisation). Apr 17, 2015 at 15:45
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For money: decimal. It costs a little more memory, but doesn't have rounding troubles like double sometimes has.

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    it has all the troubles with rounding: try 1m/3m + 1m/3m == 2m/3m. The main difference is - more bits for significand, and most important: no precision loss when operating on numbers with 5 in prime factorisation of divisor. Eg. 1m/5m + 1m/5m will be exactly equal to 2m/5m. Apr 17, 2015 at 15:47
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Definitely use integer types for your money computations.
This cannot be emphasized enough since at first glance it might seem that a floating point type is adequate.

Here an example in python code:

>>> amount = float(100.00) # one hundred dollars
>>> print amount
100.0
>>> new_amount = amount + 1
>>> print new_amount
101.0
>>> print new_amount - amount
>>> 1.0

looks pretty normal.

Now try this again with 10^20 Zimbabwe dollars:

>>> amount = float(1e20)
>>> print amount
1e+20
>>> new_amount = amount + 1
>>> print new_amount
1e+20
>>> print new_amount-amount
0.0

As you can see, the dollar disappeared.

If you use the integer type, it works fine:

>>> amount = int(1e20)
>>> print amount
100000000000000000000
>>> new_amount = amount + 1
>>> print new_amount
100000000000000000001
>>> print new_amount - amount
1
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    You don't even need very large/small values to find differences between doubles base2 approximation and actual base 10 values, many small values cannot be accurately stored. Calculate "1 - 0.1 - 0.9" (make sure the compiler doesn't optimize out the equation), and compare it to zero. You'll find that with doubles the result is something like 2e-17 instead of 0 (make sure you run a compare, as many print/ToString functions round off doubles past a certain number of decimal places to remove these types of errors).
    – David
    Jul 22, 2009 at 15:39
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    integer ?! and what happens when you have $1.5 ?
    – Noctis
    Dec 16, 2014 at 2:20
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    @Noctis you'll come up with a solution if you think about it Dec 16, 2014 at 11:37
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    :) there are many solutions, but he was talking about double vs decimal, so unless he's so far off, he'll need the decimal part...that's why your answer struck me weird.
    – Noctis
    Dec 16, 2014 at 21:34
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    There's no reason to use int instead of decimal for accuracy purposes (maybe for performance reasons). Avoid double, but use decimal. Decimal uses a base-10 exponent so you don't encounter the same binary rounding errors that you do with double when parsing a base-10 value like 0.1.
    – BlueMonkMN
    Nov 13, 2017 at 16:29
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I think that the main difference beside bit width is that decimal has exponent base 10 and double has 2

http://software-product-development.blogspot.com/2008/07/net-double-vs-decimal.html

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