Currently we have several tags regarding arbitrary precision numbers:
a bignum tag with very simple wiki
Common computer-jargon term to refer to arbitrary-precision math and data-types. The term "arbitrary-precision" refers to the ability of a machine to perform numerical computations whose precision is limited only by the available memory.
and another bigint tag with a much more informative wiki page
beside a largenumber tag
and the arbitrary-precision tag itself
My first thought is that they're the same. However while writing this meta question I found some information that made me thinks one is about integer and the other includes rational values. But then from the bigint
wiki
Several modern programming languages have built-in support for bignums, and others have libraries available for arbitrary-precision integer and floating-point math. Rather than store values as a fixed number of binary bits related to the size of the processor register, these implementations typically use variable-length arrays of digits.
...
Big ints can also be used to compute fundamental mathematical constants such as π to millions or more generally to investigate the precise behaviour of functions such as the Riemann zeta function where certain questions are difficult to explore via analytical methods. Another example is in rendering fractal images with an extremely high magnification.
which implies bigint also talks about big decimals
In any cases I think that they should be merged
Note that there are also biginteger and bigdecimal for Java, C# and some other languages but I'm not sure if they're irrelevant here or should be made into language-agnostic bigint like above or not
bignum
was for handling decimal andbigint
wasfor whole numbers? – user623150 Jan 12 '18 at 11:13bigint
is also used for the actualBIGINT
type found in many SQL dialects, which is usually just a 64-bit integer (that is, one step aboveINT
). A topic which arguably does not deserve its own tag, but is not related to arbitrary precision (and I'm not aware of any database system with native support for that). – Jeroen Mostert Jan 13 '18 at 16:49