[AccessD] roundup - decimal places

Drew Wutka DWUTKA at marlow.com
Tue Apr 8 11:47:18 CDT 2003


You are right JC.  Currency is based upon a Long integer, with the decimal
point moved over 4.  So it has no 'creep' like a floating point.
 
Drew

-----Original Message-----
From: John W. Colby [mailto:jcolby at colbyconsulting.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 8:12 AM
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: RE: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places


Charles,
 
Are you sure that Currency is just a scaled floating pt number?  I'm sure
you know, but for the edification of those who may not, in the old days you
had a form of data called BCD for binary coded decimal.  BCD is a system
where decimal DIGITS are stored in 4 bits.  Since 4 bits can represent the
values 1-15, any decimal digit can then be represented exactly without any
rounding error at all due to inexact representation in binary storage.  Then
a program (functions in the math library) would manipulate strings of binary
coded decimal DIGITS to allow absolutely precise decimal arithmetic out to
the specified precision, with no errors introduced due to binary storage
techniques.  It was my understanding that the currency datatype was a BCD
datatype, scaled to 4 decimal digits right of the decimal point.
 
My understanding also is that floating point numbers are simply a binary
approximation stored in an 80 bit number with various combinations of the
bits used for the digit and the fraction.  Thus NO floating point numbers
(results) can be guaranteed to be correct if enough calculations are
performed since the results are always stored back into a binary format,
introducing binary storage errors in representing what are supposed to be
decimal numbers (down in the lowest decimal digit).  IOW, the rightmost
digit will ALWAYS have an error, and as you perform more and more
calculations, those errors may "creep" upwards into the next digit, and the
next etc.  The more calculations you perform, the more error creep may
possibly occur.
 
BCD, and Currency IF it is based on BCD, will never have this error creep
since the system is based on exact representations of decimal DIGITS and no
binary representation is ever used at any stage of the calculation.

John W. Colby
Colby Consulting
www.ColbyConsulting.com 

-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com]On Behalf Of Wortz, Charles
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 8:42 AM
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: RE: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places


Pedro,
 
You seem to have a misconception of how computers work.  They are binary
(base 2) not decimal (base 10).  Thus numbers can only be represented as the
sum of powers of two.  Since all integers (numbers without fractional parts)
can be represented exactly as the sum of powers of two they can be stored
and manipulated without any loss of precision (excepting division
operations).
 
All floating point numbers (numbers with fractional parts), except for those
rare ones where the fractional part is an exact sum of powers of two, must
be represented by an approximation of its value.  The precision of a
floating point number tell you how close to actual value the approximate
value can come.  Thus for Singles with about seven digits of precision, you
know that up to the seventh digit accurately represent the actual value and
any digits beyond that should not be counted on to be accurate.
 
Thus you must choose between the exact representation of integers and the
approximate representation of floating point numbers.  In later versions of
VB and other languages there is now a third choice, the currency datatype.
This is a compromise between the two fundamental numeric datatypes.  It is a
scaled integer used to represent floating point numbers where you do not
want more than four digits of precision for the fractional part.
 
To get what you want, you must pick from these numeric datatypes and then
use the proper rounding and formatting functions to get the numbers to
display as you desire.  There are no other choices if you are going to do it
on a computer.
 

Charles Wortz 
Software Development Division 
Texas Education Agency 
1701 N. Congress Ave 
Austin, TX 78701-1494 
512-463-9493 
CWortz at tea.state.tx.us 

-----Original Message-----
From: Pedro Janssen [mailto:pedro at plex.nl] 
Sent: Tuesday 2003 Apr 08 06:17
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: Re: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places


Hello Charlotte,
 
i want truly round numbers with 1 precision.
 
Pedro Janssen

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Charlotte Foust <mailto:cfoust at infostatsystems.com>  
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com <mailto:accessd at databaseadvisors.com>  
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 7:41 PM
Subject: RE: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places

You're going to have to explain whether you want to truly round numbers or
just display them that way.  The Decimal places setting addresses the
display, not the precision.
 
Charlotte Foust

-----Original Message-----
From: Pedro Janssen [ mailto:pedro at plex.nl <mailto:pedro at plex.nl> ] 
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 9:25 AM
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com <mailto:accessd at databaseadvisors.com> 
Subject: Re: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places


Hello Charles,
 
when i type 5,1 i type 5,1 and not .
How does a computer changes 5,1 into 5,11415899 although i type 5,1.
 
What is the use of decimal places:1, with field size: single, when the pc
makes a lott of decimal places from it. Then this property better wasn't
available when using numbers (not currency).
Is there a way to roundup the numbers to 1decimal place without using
currency.
 
Pedro Janssen

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Wortz, Charles <mailto:CWortz at tea.state.tx.us>  
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com <mailto:accessd at databaseadvisors.com>  
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 5:42 PM
Subject: RE: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places

Pedro,
 
Remember, you are working on a binary computer.  Thus decimal numbers must
be approximated as the sum of powers of two.  For integer numbers these
approximations are exact representations.  For floating point numbers, these
approximations are just that - approximations.  None of your floating point
numbers are stored with just one digit to the right of the decimal point,
they are only displayed to you as such.
 
If you cannot learn to live with floating point numbers, then convert them
to the currency datatype.  The currency datatype will meet many of you
computational needs.
 
 

Charles Wortz 
-----Original Message-----
From: Pedro Janssen [mailto:pedro at plex.nl] 
Sent: Monday 2003 Apr 07 10:30
To: AccessD at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: [AccessD] roundup - decimal places



Hello Group,
 
i have a tableA with 5 fields (field size: single, decimal places:1)
Not all fields have values.
I want the difference from al those field, so i added a field diff.
I made an update query with the following sql:
 
UPDATE TableA SET TableA.[diff] = 100-Nz([field1],0)-Nz([[field2],0)- etc.
etc.;

The result that i get in field diff gives many records with more then 1
decimal places.
 
For example: When i have a record which contains values like 5,1 and 94,9
(all values are typed in this way and are not calculated) i get as result
0,11176548
or a record that contains values like 20,5 and 20,5 i get as result
59,997854.
Some result do have only one decimal place.
 
How is this possible? 
 
TIA
 
Pedro Janssen

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