Why is it called a single in VB.net? I'm sure there is a good reason but it doesn't seem intuitive to a non formally trained programmer like me.
6 Answers
BPAndrew's question seems to be really "why float in C# and Single in VB.NET", which noone actually answered, so here's my 2p...
The use of "float" in C# seems to be a throwback to its C/C++ heritage. "float" still maps to the System.Single type in C#, so the keyword just exists for convenience. You could just as well declare the variable as "Single" in C# the same as you do in VB.NET.
(And as stated above, naming them Single/Double actually makes more sense as they are single/double precision floating-point numbers.)
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1
double
is another keyword in C# that exits for convenience that maps toSystem.Double
.– JohnBJul 28, 2010 at 14:49
As others have said, they map to "single" and "double" precision binary floating point types. Personally I think it was a sideways step to just name System.Single
and System.Double
- why not System.Float32
and System.Float64
to match the integer types?
The reason is that both single and double are both Floating Point numbers.
single is short for Single Precision Floating Point Number (32 bits)
double is short for Double Precision Floating Point Number (64 bits)
Therefore to call a floating point number float is ambiguous.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_precision
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_precision
I think it is a shorthand
for "Single-precision"
Double
is "Double-precision"
While C-style int
and float
was probably referring to "integer"
and "floating point"
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int means integer, which is wholly different than a fixed-point (decimal) number. fixed-point is exactly that, a real number with a pre-set (fixed) precision. mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.integers.html Nov 7, 2008 at 23:07
I would like to add my hypothesis for the naming convention.
In the C/C++ word that Java and then C# were born out of, int/long and float/double could vary based on the architecture in which it resides, 32-bit or 64-bit.
In portable VM languages like Java and C#, these types do NOT change, and therefore, the naming convention could reflect that. Or it could just be what's most comfortable the last generation of programmers. Or we could create aliases for everything and let everyone do whatever they want!!
The technical name is a 'single precision floating point', 'single' because it takes a single word in memory (32 bits). A double, meanwhile, takes 64 bits on most architectures.
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1Originally the single didn't mean single word, since they were 16 bit machines. Floating point and its precision has been around longer than 32 bit machines have.– kennyNov 7, 2008 at 13:13