I wonder isn't that easier in your particular case to precache the hash of indexes, like this:
var fpIndexes = ['0', '0.02', '0.04', '0.06'];
var fpIndexesHash = {};
for (var i = 0, l = fpIndexes.length; i < l; i++) {
fpIndexesHash[fpIndexes[i]] = i;
}
Then you'll be able to get the integer index out of floating-point value without doing Math.round
:
someValues[fpIndexesHash['0.02']]; // the same as someValues[1];
I've used strings here, but I actually think plain floating-point literals can be used here too: my understanding is that a specific floating-point literal will never be represented by different IEEE-754 values at the same machine during the lifetime of a script.
So even if 0.06
literal is actually represented as 0.060000001
number in memory, it'll be uniform - and will be converted to the same string value both in fpIndexesHash
assigning round and in the interpreting one.
Math.round
is fine for your use case. Or maybe you can do integer maths with having the numbers already multiplied by 50.