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Aug 20 at 12:42 comment added user5349916 @SteveSummit People have repeatedly tried to help the OP understand. That’s why we can now say they insist on wrong estimates - because they were repeatedly told that and why those estimates are wrong, yet they, well, insist on those without any obvious reason.
Aug 20 at 12:35 comment added Steve Summit @Tsyvarev You blame the OP for their wrong estimations. I'd like to help them understand. If every OP understood everything perfectly from the get-go, we wouldn't need SO at all.
Aug 20 at 10:14 comment added Tsyvarev As for downvotes on your answer, part of them are probably because of "Floating point is broken" topic: it smells like you blame others for closing questions as duplicate for the canonical. This topic is absolutely unrelated to the discussed question on main, because OP is perfectly aware that floating-point math is imprecise. (But for some reason OP insists on wrong estimations for errors when calculate 1/3. And that wrong premise adds substantial part to "bad" status of the whole question).
Aug 20 at 10:01 comment added Tsyvarev Meanwhile, the question has been re-asked on Computer Science: cs.stackexchange.com/questions/169419/…. And has answers (at least, some of them) about advantages of binary over decimal and vice versa.
Aug 19 at 16:11 comment added Martin Brown From a hardware point of view a binary representation for the mantissa is just so much easier to get right and to do so efficiently than BCD. Historically a few notable machines had radix-16 FP like the IBM-360. x87 legacy implementations still have BCD. Kahan's Paranoia FP benchmark includes tests for unusual radix FP. OP might find this description of IEEE 754-2008 standard interesting (radix-10 is permitted - any known implementations?).
Aug 19 at 16:03 comment added user5349916 There’s also retrocomputing and the like. In large parts this is a history question.
Aug 19 at 15:25 comment added Tsyvarev "The choice between binary versus decimal as the base for computer floating-point arithmetic is an interesting one." - The choice is already done: most computers use binary format of floating-point numbers. It could be interesting to see reasonings in favor of decimal formats, but SO doesn't look as a suitable place for such questions. May be, Computer Science will be better?
Aug 19 at 13:14 history edited Steve Summit CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 19 at 13:07 history edited Steve Summit CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 19 at 12:53 history answered Steve Summit CC BY-SA 4.0