Reputation: 49
In the following query
declare @a float(23)
declare @b float(23)
declare @c float(53)
set @a = 123456789012.1234
set @b = 1234567.12345678
set @c = @a * @b
select @c
select LTRIM(STR((@c),32,12))
declare @x decimal(16,4)
declare @y decimal(16,8)
declare @z decimal (32,12)
set @x = 123456789012.1234
set @y = 1234567.12345678
set @z = @x * @y
select @z
I get answers as
1.52415693411713E+17
152415693411713020.000000000000
152415692881907790.143935926652
From the above answers the third answer is the correct one. Is this the reason why float data type is called Approximate Numeric Data Type
Or am I doing something fundamentally wrong.
BTW this is due to a problem I have with legacy system wherein I have to use float as storage data type, at the same time in there should not be loss of precision while calculation.
Please suggest alternatives, or an explanation.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 21915
Reputation: 1
Always check what is the value to have actually assigned to a variable:
declare @a float(23)
declare @b float(23)
declare @c float(23)
set @a = 123456789012.1234
set @b = 1234567.12345678
SET @c = @a * @b
select @a, @b, @c
GO
declare @a float
declare @b float
declare @c float
set @a = 123456789012.1234
set @b = 1234567.12345678
SET @c = @a * @b
select @a, @b, @c
GO
The outputs of the SELECTs:
1.234568E+11 1234567 1.524157E+17
123456789012.123 1234567.12345678 1.52415692881908E+17
P.S. Operations of 2nd level (multiplication, division) and upper on decimal values use float point computing, so they cannot be any more precise than same operations on FLOAT values, assuming the same level of depth used for both types.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
Problem not with float Data type. Problem is with using float(23). This data type has a capacity of holding 8 significant digits, not 15 as float(53). And that's exactly how many correct digits you've got in the output.
Calculation of 2 float(23) numbers is done with float(23) precision, and only afterwards converted to float(53), which is absolutely useless and misleading.
Fix the initial declarations of @a and @b and the problem will disappear.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 432271
Float is accurate to 15 significant figures only (in SQL Server).
This is demonstrated by 1.52415693411713 E+17
where 1.52415693411713
(15 digits) is as accurate as you'll get. The final 020...
after 152415693411713
with STR
is made up is the resolution of floating point
To keep precision, don't use float. It is that simple. CAST to decimal if you want for calculation, but if you CAST back to float you are limited to 15 digits
See "What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic"
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1939
The last answer
152415692881907790.143935926652
is providing scale up to 12 decimal places because you have declared @z accordingly.
declare @z decimal (32,12)
The second parameter in this declaration is scale which is set to 12.
More on the this can be found at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms187746.aspx
Upvotes: 0