Re: [HACKERS] IEEE 754 - Mailing list pgsql-admin

From Jan Wieck
Subject Re: [HACKERS] IEEE 754
Date
Msg-id 4002CF1D.3030406@Yahoo.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: [HACKERS] IEEE 754  (Sai Hertz And Control Systems <sank89@sancharnet.in>)
List pgsql-admin
Sai Hertz And Control Systems wrote:

> Dear Jan Wieck ,
>
>>>> Floating point math itself is not precise, but rather an approximation,
>>>> usually of 8 or 14 digits.  You can't approximate money.  This isn't a
>>>> PostgreSQL issue but rather a general programming issue.
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks, Bruce. I assume the arbitrary precision arithmetic Jan
>>> mentioned which is used for the NUMERIC type takes care of this.
>>
>>
>> That was the whole intention. Although Bruce is wrong, since most of
>> the time money is approximated. It is only in "bookkeeping" where this
>> is not allowed.
>
> Yes I agree with you Jan , most of the time we round the amount  and
> this is done by  truncating greater than 3 decimal digits and rounding
> the 3 digit to 2  in other words :
> select trunc(1000.236897,3);
> then
> selecr round(1000.236,2);
> This takes care of the rounding factor in money as per Indian standards
> ok, how will you verify it simple just use log and you will get the
> correct output.

What most people do not understand is the fact that real bookkeeping
only uses the 4 basic mathematical operators, and multiplication and
division even only when dealing with interest-, customs- or tax-rates.

Everything that uses any higher functions like power, logarithms and the
like is controlling and financial anlysis, maybe using accounting data,
but never feeding anything back into the bookkeeping.

People are often under the impression that effective APR's and all that
stuff fall into the same category as your bank or credit card account
balance. But that is not true.


Jan

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