abstract struct Float
- Float
- Number
- Value
- Object
Overview
Float is the base type of all floating point numbers.
There are two floating point types, Float32
and Float64
,
which correspond to the binary32
and binary64
types defined by IEEE.
A floating point literal is an optional +
or -
sign, followed by
a sequence of numbers or underscores, followed by a dot,
followed by numbers or underscores, followed by an optional exponent suffix,
followed by an optional type suffix. If no suffix is present, the literal's type is Float64
.
1.0 # Float64
1.0_f32 # Float32
1_f32 # Float32
1e10 # Float64
1.5e10 # Float64
1.5e-7 # Float64
+1.3 # Float64
-0.5 # Float64
The underscore _
before the suffix is optional.
Underscores can be used to make some numbers more readable:
1_000_000.111_111 # better than 1000000.111111
See Float
literals in the language reference.
Included Modules
- Comparable(Bigger::Int)
Direct Known Subclasses
Defined in:
bigger/ext/float.crInstance Method Summary
-
#<=>(other : Bigger::Int) : Int32
The comparison operator.
Instance Method Detail
The comparison operator. Returns 0
if the two objects are equal,
a negative number if this object is considered less than other,
a positive number if this object is considered greater than other,
or nil
if the two objects are not comparable.
Subclasses define this method to provide class-specific ordering.
The comparison operator is usually used to sort values:
# Sort in a descending way:
[3, 1, 2].sort { |x, y| y <=> x } # => [3, 2, 1]
# Sort in an ascending way:
[3, 1, 2].sort { |x, y| x <=> y } # => [1, 2, 3]