Difference between revisions of "Float"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Huney Jewell (talk | contribs) m (Added Link to Example Format Decimal) |
Huney Jewell (talk | contribs) m (Improved formatting according my increased knowledge on Wiki editing ;-)) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
If you are dividing 2 constants, be sure to define them as floats or your result may get rounded. Better yet, do the math on your calculator and save the server some cycles. | If you are dividing 2 constants, be sure to define them as floats or your result may get rounded. Better yet, do the math on your calculator and save the server some cycles. | ||
''' | <div id="box"> | ||
== See Also == | |||
<div style="padding: 0.5em"> | |||
'''Articles''' | |||
*LSL Examples: [[Format_Decimal|Format Decimal]] | *LSL Examples: [[Format_Decimal|Format Decimal]] | ||
</div></div> |
Revision as of 02:14, 11 September 2007
LSL Portal | Functions | Events | Types | Operators | Constants | Flow Control | Script Library | Categorized Library | Tutorials |
Floating point data types are 32 bit numbers in IEEE-754 form. If you want a decimal point in your number, then it is a float.
The Range is 1.175494351E-38 to 3.402823466E+38
They can be specified in scientific notation like 2.6E-5.
If a function requires a float as a parameter, and the number is an integer (e.g. 5), be sure to add a .0 so it is created as a float (e.g. 5.0)
If you are dividing 2 constants, be sure to define them as floats or your result may get rounded. Better yet, do the math on your calculator and save the server some cycles.
See Also
Articles
- LSL Examples: Format Decimal