floating-accuracy has this info page (is there a shortcut to link to a tag's info page?):
Floating point numbers (typically meaning the IEEE standard) are inherently inexact and errors can compound, leading to edge cases in some decision processes, or numerical instability in certain algorithms.
To the point if perhaps rather densely-worded, but when compared to floating-point's info page:
Many questions asked here about floating point math are about small inaccuracies in floating point arithmetic. To use the example from the excerpt, 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 might result in 0.300000001 instead of the expected 0.3. [...]
And so on for a whole page. This anticipates and answers a common question, so assuming people actually read the tag wiki, should we have at least a pointer in floating-accuracy to either floating-point or a canonical answer?
I can edit the tag myself, but I'm not sure what the best solution is, so I'm throwing the question to the masses on Meta.
BTW, I notice that the tag-wiki says:
A "tag wiki" is an editable page that briefly summarizes the topic of the tag and that may provide links to existing questions that are often useful to many people.
(My bold) Why doesn't floating-point point to a canonical answer on 0.1 + 0.1 != 0.2
instead of/along with off-site resources?
0.1 + 0.1 != 0.2
? If so, why didn't you link to it here? Do you mean this question, as previously discussed on Meta?