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Version: Zig 0.14.0 (dev)

Floats

Zig's floats are strictly IEEE-compliant unless @setFloatMode(.Optimized) is used, which is equivalent to GCC's -ffast-math. Floats coerce to larger float types.

const expect = @import("std").testing.expect;

test "float widening" {
const a: f16 = 0;
const b: f32 = a;
const c: f128 = b;
try expect(c == @as(f128, a));
}

Floats support multiple kinds of literal.

const floating_point: f64 = 123.0E+77;
const another_float: f64 = 123.0;
const yet_another: f64 = 123.0e+77;

const hex_floating_point: f64 = 0x103.70p-5;
const another_hex_float: f64 = 0x103.70;
const yet_another_hex_float: f64 = 0x103.70P-5;

Underscores may also be placed between digits.

const lightspeed: f64 = 299_792_458.000_000;
const nanosecond: f64 = 0.000_000_001;
const more_hex: f64 = 0x1234_5678.9ABC_CDEFp-10;

Integers and floats may be converted using the built-in functions @floatFromInt and @intFromFloat. @floatFromInt is always safe, whereas @intFromFloat is detectable illegal behaviour if the float value cannot fit in the integer destination type.

const expect = @import("std").testing.expect;

test "int-float conversion" {
const a: i32 = 0;
const b = @as(f32, @floatFromInt(a));
const c = @as(i32, @intFromFloat(b));
try expect(c == a);
}