whatick 1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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18.11.2012, 20:58. Показов 5568. Ответов 10 Метки нет (Все метки)
Всем привет В коде в некоторых ответах (значение х равный дробному отрицательному числу, т.е. -3,5; -2,5; -1,5; -0,5; ) выдает nan, а остальные значения считает, помогите разобраться
Выводит такие значения 2.199023255544E12
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Programming Эксперт 94731 / 64177 / 26122 Регистрация: 12.04.2006 Сообщений: 116,782 |
18.11.2012, 20:58 |
10 |
14 / 13 / 5 Регистрация: 04.10.2012 Сообщений: 29 |
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19.11.2012, 01:29 |
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Для примера возьмем первый NaN. Он получается при возведении в степень таким образомтаким образом:
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1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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19.11.2012, 02:45 [ТС] |
3 |
т.е. этот пример правильно не посчитается? или можно изменить код, что на выходе цифры были?
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4088 / 3822 / 745 Регистрация: 18.05.2010 Сообщений: 9,331 Записей в блоге: 11 |
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19.11.2012, 07:40 |
4 |
т.е. этот пример правильно не посчитается? или можно изменить код, что на выходе цифры были? Странный вопрос, как вы собираетесь извлекать корень из -3.5?
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SpamBot 14 / 13 / 5 Регистрация: 04.10.2012 Сообщений: 29 |
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19.11.2012, 13:30 |
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Там где NaN, значение функции посчитать нельзя, поэтому на графике это будут так называемые «выколотые» точки, где значение функция не имеет значения. Поэтому при вычислении уместно сделать проверку:
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1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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19.11.2012, 14:02 [ТС] |
6 |
Странный вопрос, как вы собираетесь извлекать корень из -3.5? я сначала в mathcad считал, так он выводит значение. Я с С++ перешел на java, так вот подумал, может в последней есть что подобное…
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1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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19.11.2012, 14:40 [ТС] |
7 |
я понимаю, что степерь 1/2= корень и что корень из отрицательного числа не считается, но вот в mathcad посчиталось.
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2000 / 1427 / 92 Регистрация: 25.11.2010 Сообщений: 3,611 |
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19.11.2012, 14:44 |
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я понимаю, что степерь 1/2= корень и что корень из отрицательного числа не считается, но вот в mathcad посчиталось. И какое значение mathcad выдает для
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1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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19.11.2012, 14:59 [ТС] |
9 |
я сначала в mathcad считал, так он выводит значение. Я с С++ перешел на java, так вот подумал, может в последней есть что подобное…
И какое значение mathcad выдает для странно все это…
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1 / 1 / 0 Регистрация: 18.11.2012 Сообщений: 19 |
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19.11.2012, 15:02 [ТС] |
10 |
он видно работает как с комплексными просто )
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4088 / 3822 / 745 Регистрация: 18.05.2010 Сообщений: 9,331 Записей в блоге: 11 |
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19.11.2012, 15:10 |
11 |
странно все это… Он вам выводит
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Нужно сделать программу, которая выводит результат вычисления выражения в консоль. Проблема в том, что результат выводится корректно, если присвоить значения переменным в коде программы. Но если ввести их с клавиатуры, то выводит nan
. Код на Java.
Как исправить ошибку и сделать две такие же программы на C и C++ ?
package Formula;
import static java.lang.Math.pow;
import java.util.Scanner;
public class My_Program {
public static void main(String[] args) {
double m, a, res, s1, e, l1, s2, mod1, mod2, l2;
System.out.println("Введите целое число х:");
Scanner in= new Scanner (System.in);
int x = in.nextInt();
System.out.println("Введите целое число d:");
int d = in.nextInt();
System.out.println("Введите дробное число a. Целую и дробную часть разделите запятой:");
a = in.nextDouble();
System.out.println("Введите дробное число u. Целую и дробную часть разделите запятой:");
m = in.nextDouble();
s1= Math.pow(Math.sin( pow(d,3)),2);
e=Math.exp(Math.abs(a-Math.tan(x)));
mod1=Math.abs((1-s1)/(1.5+e));
l1=pow(Math.log(pow(a,2)),3);
s2=pow(Math.sin(d),2);
mod2=Math.abs((m-l1)/(1+s2));
l2=pow(Math.log(mod2)/Math.log(3),2);
res=Math.acos (pow( mod1,0.3333)+Math.sqrt(2.7+l2));
System.out.print("Входные данные rn");
System.out.print("============== rn");
System.out.printf("a =%.1f",a);
System.out.print( "rn");
System.out.printf("d = %d ",d);
System.out.print( "rn");
System.out.printf("x = %d",x);
System.out.print( "rn");
System.out.printf("U=%f",m);
System.out.print("rn");
System.out.print("Результат:rn");
System.out.print("==============");
System.out.print( "rn");
System.out.printf("B= %f",res);
}
}
Ok so i am bulding this application that calculates 3 input boxes. i am getting a NaN when doing some calculations with 0 values.
here is the main.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<ScrollView xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="fill_parent" android:layout_height="fill_parent"
android:id="@+id/ScrollView01" >
<AbsoluteLayout android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="fill_parent" android:layout_height="fill_parent">
<EditText android:id="@+id/InputNumber01"
android:numeric="integer|decimal" android:imeOptions="actionNext"
android:textStyle="bold" android:hint="Service Call"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:layout_y="5px" android:layout_height="55dip"
android:textSize="20dip" android:layout_width="195dip"
android:selectAllOnFocus="true" android:inputType="numberDecimal"/>
<EditText android:id="@+id/InputNumber02"
android:numeric="integer|decimal" android:inputType="numberDecimal"
android:textStyle="bold" android:hint="Parts" android:layout_x="5dip"
android:layout_y="90px" android:layout_height="55dip"
android:textSize="20dip" android:layout_width="195dip"
android:selectAllOnFocus="true" android:imeOptions="actionNext"/>
<EditText android:id="@+id/InputNumber03" android:numeric="integer|decimal"
android:inputType="numberDecimal" android:textStyle="bold"
android:hint="Labor" android:layout_x="5dip" android:layout_y="175px"
android:layout_height="55dip" android:textSize="20dip"
android:layout_width="195dip" android:selectAllOnFocus="true"
android:imeOptions="actionDone"/>
<Button android:text="Calculate" android:id="@+id/actionButton"
android:textStyle="bold" android:layout_height="50dip"
android:layout_width="fill_parent" android:layout_y="300px"
android:textSize="15dip" />
<TextView android:id="@+id/TextResult" android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:numeric="integer|decimal" android:textStyle="bold"
android:layout_width="85dip" android:layout_x="225dip"
android:layout_y="175dip" android:gravity="left" android:textSize="18dip"
android:textColor="#1d9ee2" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView04"
android:text="Total:" android:textStyle="bold" android:gravity="right"
android:layout_width="55dip" android:layout_y="175dip"
android:layout_x="165dip" android:textSize="18dip" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView05"
android:text="Total Labor:" android:layout_y="260dip"
android:layout_width="95dip" android:layout_x="5dip" android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:text="@+id/TotalLabor"
android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:id="@+id/TotalLabor" android:layout_y="260dip"
android:layout_x="110dip" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView06"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:text="Total Services:"
android:layout_y="280dip" android:layout_width="95dip"
android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TotalServices"
android:text="@+id/TotalServices" android:layout_y="280dip"
android:layout_x="110dip" />
<TextView android:id="@+id/TextView07" android:text="SC Tax %:"
android:layout_y="300dip" android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:layout_width="95dip" android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:text="@+id/TextView08"
android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:id="@+id/SCTaxPercent" android:layout_y="300dip"
android:layout_x="110dip" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView08"
android:text="Sales Tax:" android:textStyle="bold" android:layout_y="175dip"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:textSize="18dip"
android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/SalesTax"
android:textStyle="bold" android:numeric="integer|decimal"
android:layout_y="175dip" android:gravity="left"
android:layout_width="65dip" android:textSize="18dip"
android:layout_x="100dip" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView09"
android:text="SC Taxable:" android:layout_y="320dip"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:layout_width="95dip" android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:text="@+id/TextView10"
android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/ScTaxable"
android:layout_y="320dip" android:layout_x="110dip" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView10"
android:text="Taxable:" android:layout_y="340dip"
android:layout_width="95dip" android:layout_x="5dip" android:gravity="right" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:text="@+id/TextView11"
android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/Taxable"
android:layout_y="340dip" android:layout_x="110dip" />
<EditText android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:text="9.50"
android:layout_width="90dip" android:id="@+id/SalesTaxValue"
android:layout_x="5dip" android:layout_y="430dip" android:numeric="integer|decimal"
android:selectAllOnFocus="true" />
<TextView android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:id="@+id/TextView01"
android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:layout_x="5dip"
android:text="Sales Tax Value:" android:layout_y="407dip" />
</AbsoluteLayout>
</ScrollView>
and this is the calculator.java
package com.Eddie.TaxCalculator;
import java.text.NumberFormat;
import com.Eddie.TaxCalculator.R;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.WindowManager;
import android.view.View.OnClickListener;
import android.widget.Button;
import android.widget.EditText;
import android.widget.TextView;
import android.widget.Toast;
public class Calculator extends Activity {
private Button calculateButton;
private EditText inputField01;
private EditText inputField02;
private EditText inputField03;
private EditText salesTaxValue;
private double serviceCall;
private double parts;
private double labor;
private double salestaxvalue;
String zero ="0";
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
calculateButton = (Button) findViewById(R.id.actionButton);
calculateButton.setOnClickListener(doSomethingNow);
this.getWindow().setSoftInputMode(WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_ALWAYS_VISIBLE);
}
private OnClickListener doSomethingNow = new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View arg0) {
inputField01 = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.InputNumber01);
inputField02 = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.InputNumber02);
inputField03 = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.InputNumber03);
salesTaxValue = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.SalesTaxValue);
if (inputField01.getText().toString().length()==0)
{
inputField01.setText(zero);
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Service Call TextBox was empty.",
Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
toast.show();
}
if(inputField02.getText().toString().length()==0)
{
inputField02.setText(zero);
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Parts TextBox was empty.",
Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
toast.show();
}
if(inputField03.getText().toString().length()==0)
{
inputField03.setText(zero);
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Labor TextBox was empty.",
Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
toast.show();
}
//service Call is 0
if (inputField01.getText().toString().equals("0"))
{
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Service Call TextBox value is 0.",
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT);
//toast.setGravity(Gravity.CENTER_VERTICAL, 0, 0);
toast.show();
}
//Parts is 0
if (inputField02.getText().toString().equals("0"))
{
//inputField01.setText("10");
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Parts TextBox value is 0.",
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT);
toast.show();
}
//Labor is 0
if (inputField03.getText().toString().equals("0"))
{
//inputField01.setText("10");
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Labor TextBox value is 0.",
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT);
toast.show();
}
serviceCall = Double.parseDouble(inputField01.getText().toString());
parts = Double.parseDouble(inputField02.getText().toString());
labor = Double.parseDouble(inputField03.getText().toString());
salestaxvalue = Double.parseDouble(salesTaxValue.getText().toString());
NumberFormat numberFormat = NumberFormat.getInstance();
numberFormat.setMaximumFractionDigits(2);
numberFormat.setGroupingUsed(false);
TextView totalLabor = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.TotalLabor);
Double totalLaborResults = serviceCall + labor;
String totalLaborCalcInt = numberFormat.format(totalLaborResults).toString();
totalLabor.setText (totalLaborCalcInt);
TextView totalServices = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.TotalServices);
Double totalServicesResults = (parts + labor);
String totalServicesCalcInt = numberFormat.format(totalServicesResults);
totalServices.setText (totalServicesCalcInt);
TextView servicecallTaxpercent = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.SCTaxPercent);
Double scTaxPercentResults = (parts / totalServicesResults);
String serviceCallPercentCalcInt = numberFormat.format(scTaxPercentResults).toString();
servicecallTaxpercent.setText (serviceCallPercentCalcInt);
TextView scTaxable = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.ScTaxable);
Double scTaxableResults = (serviceCall * scTaxPercentResults);
String serviceCallTaxableCalcInt =numberFormat.format (scTaxableResults).toString();
scTaxable.setText (serviceCallTaxableCalcInt);
TextView taxable = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.Taxable);
Double taxableResults = (parts + scTaxableResults);
String taxableCalcInt =numberFormat.format (taxableResults).toString();
taxable.setText (taxableCalcInt);
TextView salesTax = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.SalesTax);
Double salesTaxResults = (taxableResults * salestaxvalue) /100;
String salesTaxCalcInt = numberFormat.format (salesTaxResults).toString();
salesTax.setText (salesTaxCalcInt);
TextView textResult = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.Total);
Double additionResults = (salesTaxResults + parts+ serviceCall + labor);
String TotalCalcInt = numberFormat.format(additionResults).toString();
textResult.setText (TotalCalcInt);
}
};
};
when entering a number in input 1 (service Call) and zeros in the two other inputs i get a NaN Total.
if All input Boxes are zero value i also get a NaN total, NaN sale Tax, NaN scTax % textview (sc is short of Service Call)
NaN scTaxable, NaN taxable.
could anyone help me find this but i’ve been trying for two weeks now.
pls help.
программа вроде работает, но выводит NaN
package com.javarush.task.task05.task0507;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
/*
Среднее арифметическое
*/
public class Solution {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
//напишите тут ваш код
while (true){
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
double a = Double.parseDouble(reader.readLine());
double b=0;
int c=0;
if (a==-1) {
double d=b/c;
System.out.println(d);
break;
}
else {
b+=a;
c++;
}
}
}
}
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We learn something everyday. We don’t always realise it, but we do. Sometimes the thing you learn isn’t new at all, but something you sort of knew
but never really thought about too much.
I recently learned that my understanding of what causes a NaN
value in Java’s double
was wrong.
The story
I was working on an integration project and received a bug report on one of my services. The report said that my service is returning an HTTP code ‘500’ for a specific input message.
During my investigation I found the cause of the exception was an unexpected value returned from a down stream service. It was a SOAP service which returned something like the following in its XML response:
<SomeNumberField type="number">NaN</SomeNumberField>
I was a bit surprised to see the NaN
there since I would expect them to either leave the field off or set it to null
if they don’t have a value. This looked like a calculation bug since we all know that, in Java and C# at least, dividing a double with 0 results in a NaN
. (Spoiler: It doesn’t)
However, this got me thinking and I tried to remember what I know about double
and NaN
. This resulted in an embarrisingly deep spiral down the rabbit hole.
NaN
Well if you think about it NaN
is kind of like a number in this case, even though NaN means Not-a-Number. It exists to enable calculations with indeterminate results to be represented as a “number” in the set of valid double
values. Without NaN
you could get completely wrong results or you’ll get an exception, which isn’t ideal either. NaN
is defined, same as Infinity
, to be part of the set of valid doubles.
System.out.println(Double.isNaN(Double.NaN)); //true
System.out.println(Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY == Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY); //true
System.out.println(Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY == Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY); //true
I played around with double
a bit and I thought to share it in a post, because I think the various edge cases of double
are interesting.
I started with the following experiment:
//Lets make a NaN!
double NaN = 5.0/0;
System.out.println("NaN: " + NaN);
>> NaN: Infinity
Wait. What?
Turns out that I have lived with this misconception about what happens when you divide a double by zero. I seriously expected that a double
divided by 0 is NaN
. Well it turns out I was wrong. You get:
POSITIVE_INFINITY
double infinity = 5.0/0;
System.out.println((infinity == Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY)); //true
I can sort of rationalise that the answer could be infinity because you are dividing something largish with something much much smaller. In fact, dividing it by nothing so you could argue the result of that should be infitely large. Although, mathematically this does not make any sense. x/0 is undefined since there is no number that you can multiply with 0 to get back to x again. (for x <> 0)
Anyway lets play with NaN
a bit.
double NaN = Double.NaN;
System.out.println("NaN: " + NaN); //NaN: NaN
System.out.println((NaN + 10)); //(NaN + 10): NaN
System.out.println((NaN - 10)); //(NaN - 10): NaN
System.out.println((NaN - NaN)); //NaN - NaN: NaN
System.out.println((NaN / 0)); //NaN / 0: NaN
System.out.println((NaN * 0)); //NaN * 0: NaN
Well no surprises here. Once a NaN always a NaN.
I used
Double.NaN
above to be sure I have aNaN
but if you want to make one yourself then calculating the square root of a negative number is an easy way:
System.out.println((Math.sqrt(-1))); //NaN
Max and Min value
Before we get to infinity let take a quick look at Double.MAX_VALUE
and Double.MIN_VALUE
. These are special constants defined on Double
which you can use to check if a number is at the maximum of what a double can represent. If a number is equal to Double.MAX_VALUE
it means that it is about to overflow into Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY
. The same goes for Double.MIN_VALUE
except that it will overflow to Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY
.
Something to note about double
is that it can represent ridiculously large numbers using a measly 64 bits. The maximum value is larger than 1.7*10^308
!
System.out.println("Double.MAX_VALUE is large! : " + (Double.MAX_VALUE == 1.7976931348623157 * Math.pow(10,308)));
> Double.MAX_VALUE is large! : true
It can represent these large numbers because it encodes numbers as a small real number multiplied by some exponent. See the IEEE spec
Let’s see what it takes to make Double.MAX_VALUE
overflow to infinity.
double max = Double.MAX_VALUE;
System.out.println((max == (max + 1))); //true
System.out.println((max == (max + 1000))); //true
System.out.println("EVEN...");
System.out.println((max == (max + Math.pow(10,291)))); //true
System.out.println("HOWEVER...");
System.out.println((max == (max + Math.pow(10,292)))); //false
System.out.println((max + Math.pow(10,292))); //Infinity
This ability to represent seriously large numbers comes at a price of accuracy. After a while only changes in the most significant parts of the number can be reflected. As seen in the following code snippet:
double large_num = Math.pow(10,200);
System.out.println("large_num == (large_num + 1000): " + (large_num == (large_num + 1000))); //true
At large integer values the steps between numbers are very very large since the double has no place to record the change if it doesn’t affect its most 16 most significant digits. As shown above 1000 plus a very large number is still that same very large number.
Infinity
Java’s double
supports two kinds of infinity. Positive and negative inifity. The easiest to make those are by dividing by 0.
double pos_infinity = 5.0/0;
System.out.println("POSITIVE_INFINITY == pos_infinity: " + (Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY == pos_infinity));
double neg_infinity = -5.0/0;
System.out.println("NEGATIVE_INFINITY == neg_infinity: " + (Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY == neg_infinity));
In maths infinity is a numerical concept representing the idea of an infinitly large number. It is used, for example in calculus, to describe an unbounded limit — some number that can grow without bound.
In this case things are pretty much the same as in maths, where POSITIVE_INFINITY and NEGATIVE_INFINITY are used to represent numbers that
are infinitely large. However they function more as a way to know something went wrong in your calculation. You are either trying to calculate something that is too large to store in a double
or there is some bug in the code.
There are once again some interesting things to note when playing with positive and negative infinity.
double pos = Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY;
System.out.println("POSITIVE_INFINITY + 1000 = " + (pos + 1000));
System.out.println("POSITIVE_INFINITY + 10^1000 = " + (pos + Math.pow(10,1000)));
System.out.println("POSTIVE_INFINITY * 2 = " + (pos * 2));
Once the value is infinity it stays there even if you add or substract rediculously large numbers. However there is one interesting case, when you substract infinity from infinity:
double pos = Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY;
double neg = Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY;
System.out.println("POSITIVE_INFINITY - POSITIVE_INFINITY = " + (pos - pos));
System.out.println("POSITIVE_INFINITY + NEGATIVE_INFINITY = " + (pos + neg));
Subtracting infinity from infinity yields NaN
and as you would expect adding or subtracting NaN
yields a NaN
again.
System.out.println("POSTIVE_INFINITY + NaN" + (pos + Double.NaN));
System.out.println("POSTIVE_INFINITY - NaN" + (pos - Double.NaN));
In closing
Both Java’s float
and double
types follow the IEEE 754-1985 standard for representing floating point numbers. I am not going to go into great detail on the internals of double
, but it suffice to say that double
and float
are not perfectly accurate when you use them to perform arithmetic. The Java primitive type documentation says:
This data type should never be used for precise values, such as currency. For that,
you will need to use the java.math.BigDecimal class instead.
If precision is you main concern then it is generally better to stick with good old java.math.BigDecimal
. BigDecimal is immutable which makes it nice to work with, but the most important thing is precision. You have absolute control over number precision, without the rounding or overflow surprises you get with double
and float
. However, if performance is the main concern it is better to stick with float
or double
and live with the inaccuracies.
For more information on how Java handles NaN, infinity and rouding read the documentation here.