However, in most cases, float and double seem to be interchangeable, i.e Using one or the other does not seem to affec. From what i have read, a value of data type double has an approximate precision of 15 decimal places However, when i use a number whose decimal representation repeats, such as 1.0/7.0, i find tha. Using long double i get 18/19 = 0.947368421052631578., and 947368421052631578 is the repeating decimal Using double i get 0.947368421052631526.however, the former is correct
494 a double is not an integer, so the cast won't work Note the difference between the double class and the double primitive Also note that a double is a number, so it has the method intvalue, which you can use to get the value as a primitive int. Double d = ((double) num) / denom But is there another way to get the correct double result I don't like casting primitives, who knows what may happen.
I have a primitive float and i need as a primitive double Simply casting the float to double gives me weird extra precision A simple comparison of two double values in java creates some problems Let's consider the following simple code snippet in java
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