-16

Why is the question What advantages do floating point numbers have over other alternatives such as BCD or DPD? considered opinion-based? I want to get information that's based on facts.

0

5 Answers 5

13

Disclaimer: I would have voted differently, but still voted to close.


The question seems to have a very subjective view on BCD versus floating point. For starters, it does not even seem to be really about BCD versus floating point, but rather binary versus decimal representations. The examples are extremely arbitrarily chosen, dismissing accuracy differences, overgeneralising to "we use decimal", and focusing on a single concrete case of 1/3. Even the premise is arbitrary since BCD is a thing and there are computers and components using it.

With all this, people have to blindly guess what is relevant. Should they roll along with the assumptions and discuss those cases or expand on conflicting ones? Should they even discuss all those barely significant points and dive into implementation instead? Should they come up with their own examples and use cases?

This subjectivity and need to guess ultimately means that people must follow their own hunch - their own opinion - of what is or isn't a relevant answer.

2
  • I have changed the question
    – user26738690
    Commented Aug 19 at 9:44
  • 8
    @KirillLanskoy That doesn't change how the question looked when it was closed, i.e. what you asked about here on meta. The edits also don't seem to invalidate anything of what I referred to here. Commented Aug 19 at 9:45
11

Why is the question "What advantages..." considered opinion-based?

Because you are expecting other people to decide for you the criteria for whether or not something is an "advantage". We don't want open-ended, speculative questions.

Aside from that, I'm not convinced that this title describes the entire question. What you have written seems unclear and unfocused, and not properly researched. For example, you imagine hypothetical specialized hardware that could manipulate binary-coded decimal numbers "with speed of float"; but you give no reason why it should be possible.

It comes across like you're really just annoyed by floating-point imprecision, since you say that "if we use BCD in these 52 bits, we will get very accurate numbers without rounding errors".

But decimal numbers are not actually any more "accurate" than binary ones - the only thing that you're gaining is the ability to represent the value exactly with decimal notation. But the choice of base 10 is, from a mathematician's perspective, completely arbitrary. Base 10 allows you to represent 1/5 exactly and add 1/5 + 1/5 exactly. But it still doesn't help even a little bit with 1/3. And there's no base that would let you work with π exactly.

In short: the only ways that the question makes sense to ask, require an opinion - because they require deciding which factors are more important, and require some aesthetic preferences (like what digits we use to write numbers when we show them to the user).

10

The title alone invokes that you are asking for opinions. Questions of the format "Why was x chosen over y?" though can involve facts of the why those why's can and often do involve opinions. Such questions are better worded on asking for explicit benefits, rather than a broad "Why".

(Using a topic I'm an "SME" in) Instead of asking "Why would you use a Tally instead of a While loop in SQL Server?" you could ask "What are the performance benefits of using a Tally instead of a While loop in SQL Server?"; the tone of the question though very similar invokes quite a different answer. The former does invoke opinions as well as facts; "I prefer a WHILE because it's easier to write." is not an uncommon opinion.

As for the content of the question, it's not about Programming or Software development; the question is far more closely about Computer Science, which you have actually tagged in the question itself. Even if your question was deemed to not be opinionated it would still remain closed, as it's not on-topic on Stack Overflow; we don't reopen questions just to change the closure reason.

The question might be on-topic on Computer Science, but I suggest you read their tour and asking article before considering posting there; I am not a member of that community, and know nothing of Computer Science, so I cannot with authority say my suggestion is correct.

3
  • I have changed the question
    – user26738690
    Commented Aug 19 at 9:44
  • 1
    @KirillLanskoy As Thom said, the question still isn't about software development or programming. Perhaps try posting the question to the Computer Science stackexchange, where it would be more relevant? Commented Aug 19 at 9:58
  • 1
    Changing the question to not be opinionated doesn't address the other problem; you can't fix that, @KirillLanskoy . YOu are better off deleting it and finding out from Computer Science if the question would be on-topic.
    – Thom A
    Commented Aug 19 at 9:59
-12

The choice between binary versus decimal as the base for computer floating-point arithmetic is an interesting one. I would be happy to see a canonical SO question on this. (I would have ideas to contribute to an answer.)

However, such a question would have to be carefully asked.

Most times, the question comes off as some variation on "Floating point is broken, it didn't give me the same answer as my pocket calculator", to which the knee-jerk answer is to redirect to the canonical Is floating-point math broken? .

And once the collective SO hivemind has decided that the question is a simpleminded one that deserves Is floating-point math broken? as an answer, it is nearly impossible to wrestle the discussion back to the possibly more-interesting aspects of the question.

IEEE-754 binary floating-point arithmetic is actually very, very good and very, very precise, although it takes a fair amount of experience with the subject to fully appreciate this. And if you want to understand why binary was chosen, it's those people with lots of experience that you want to get answers from. But if you alienate those people, by seeming to assert that floating point is broken, or that decimal would be better, you're probably not going to get the good, thoughtful, accurate answers you want.

7
  • 2
    "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?
    – Tsyvarev
    Commented Aug 19 at 15:25
  • There’s also retrocomputing and the like. In large parts this is a history question. Commented Aug 19 at 16:03
  • 2
    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?). Commented Aug 19 at 16:11
  • 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.
    – Tsyvarev
    Commented Aug 20 at 10:01
  • 2
    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).
    – Tsyvarev
    Commented Aug 20 at 10:14
  • @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. Commented Aug 20 at 12:35
  • 6
    @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. Commented Aug 20 at 12:42
-13

So I understand why this question got closed, I agree that it's probably better for cs.se, but still, the way we handle these things often seems unnecessarily harsh on OP's.

We basically said:

  1. This is a bad question.
  2. It's so bad we're going to downvote it severely.
  3. It's so bad we're going to close it.
  4. It's so bad we're going to delete it. [Whoops, spoke too soon, now it's been undeleted.]
  5. It's so bad that when you ask here on meta what's wrong with it, we're going to downvote the meta question severely, too.
  6. It's so bad that when one of the answers here on meta dares to suggest it's a good question, we're going to downvote that answer, too.

Along the way, we gave a few answers, and those were pretty dispiriting, too.

  1. It's so obvious why binary floating point is superior to decimal that you shouldn't have had to ask about it.
  2. The choice of binary over decimal floating point is so firm and fixed that there's no point in asking about it; you should just accept it, unquestioningly.

Now, in fact, while the choice of binary over decimal floating point has many excellent reasons behind it, they are not obvious to the newcomer — which is why newcomers always have problems with floating point, always ask about it, often assume it's broken, leading to our canonical but contentiously-titled question about it.

So I wish we could have given this poster just a little bit of sympathy, because I really do believe this is a reasonable thing for programmers to wonder about.

5
  • 4
    This seems like a misrepresentation of what happened. There were tons of comments on the question engaging with the OP to discuss the shortcomings of the question. The general question asked here on meta has ample duplicates, is in poor shape and still people did engage the OP. The downvoted meta answer you refer to doesn’t even address the question, it’s general commentary on a hypothetical question that wasn’t asked even adding a narrative that doesn’t match what happened (the dupe that wasn’t actually suggested ). These Q&As have real shortcomings that should be fixed. Commented Aug 20 at 5:01
  • 3
    "Along the way, we gave a few answers, and those were pretty dispiriting, too." - no, nobody said either of those things. And to be quite frank, you come across as ranting rather than having any interest in establishing policy. Commented Aug 20 at 5:58
  • 5
    Comments aren't answers either; that post is off-topic on Stack Overflow, however, people continued to, effectively, debate the problem in the comments, which is not what comments are for. That post has all kinds of different problems at this point. The way it went, the whole things would have been better off on Reddit or, worse, on Discussions.
    – Thom A
    Commented Aug 20 at 10:57
  • @KarlKnechtel My overarching interest is, as always, to help people past their difficulties and misconceptions, and learn to program better. This attitude quite frequently brings be into conflict with SO's policies. This thread is a useful reminder that I should spend less time on SO, that I really don't belong here, because I fundamentally don't accept the site's stated goals. Commented Aug 20 at 12:33
  • "this is a bad question." - no, that's what you make of it. Write it without any bold highlighting and it is more true. I personally tend to say Stack Overflow-incompatible question because I'll meet you halfway that the terminology used is unnecessarily provocative and ambiguous. Not all questions belong on Stack Overflow. That doesn't automatically make it a bad question, just... not a fit for the site.
    – Gimby
    Commented Aug 21 at 13:39

You must log in to answer this question.