Floating-point numeric types (C# reference)
The floating-point numeric types represent real numbers. All floating-point numeric types are value types. They are also simple types and can be initialized with literals. All floating-point numeric types support arithmetic, comparison, and equality operators.
Characteristics of the floating-point types
C# supports the following predefined floating-point types:
C# type/keyword | Approximate range | Precision | Size | .NET type |
---|---|---|---|---|
float |
±1.5 x 10−45 to ±3.4 x 1038 | ~6-9 digits | 4 bytes | System.Single |
double |
±5.0 × 10−324 to ±1.7 × 10308 | ~15-17 digits | 8 bytes | System.Double |
decimal |
±1.0 x 10-28 to ±7.9228 x 1028 | 28-29 digits | 16 bytes | System.Decimal |
In the preceding table, each C# type keyword from the leftmost column is an alias for the corresponding .NET type. They are interchangeable. For example, the following declarations declare variables of the same type:
double a = 12.3;
System.Double b = 12.3;
The default value of each floating-point type is zero, 0
. Each of the floating-point types has the MinValue
and MaxValue
constants that provide the minimum and maximum finite value of that type. The float
and double
types also provide constants that represent not-a-number and infinity values. For example, the double
type provides the following constants: Double.NaN, Double.NegativeInfinity, and Double.PositiveInfinity.
The decimal
type is appropriate when the required degree of precision is determined by the number of digits to the right of the decimal point. Such numbers are commonly used in financial applications, for currency amounts (for example, $1.00), interest rates (for example, 2.625%), and so forth. Even numbers that are precise to only one decimal digit are handled more accurately by the decimal
type: 0.1, for example, can be exactly represented by a decimal
instance, while there's no double
or float
instance that exactly represents 0.1. Because of this difference in numeric types, unexpected rounding errors can occur in arithmetic calculations when you use double
or float
for decimal data. You can use double
instead of decimal
when optimizing performance is more important than ensuring accuracy. However, any difference in performance would go unnoticed by all but the most calculation-intensive applications. Another possible reason to avoid decimal
is to minimize storage requirements. For example, ML.NET uses float
because the difference between 4 bytes and 16 bytes adds up for very large data sets. For more information, see System.Decimal.
You can mix integral types and the float
and double
types in an expression. In this case, integral types are implicitly converted to one of the floating-point types and, if necessary, the float
type is implicitly converted to double
. The expression is evaluated as follows:
- If there is
double
type in the expression, the expression evaluates todouble
, or tobool
in relational and equality comparisons. - If there is no
double
type in the expression, the expression evaluates tofloat
, or tobool
in relational and equality comparisons.
You can also mix integral types and the decimal
type in an expression. In this case, integral types are implicitly converted to the decimal
type and the expression evaluates to decimal
, or to bool
in relational and equality comparisons.
You cannot mix the decimal
type with the float
and double
types in an expression. In this case, if you want to perform arithmetic, comparison, or equality operations, you must explicitly convert the operands either from or to the decimal
type, as the following example shows:
double a = 1.0;
decimal b = 2.1m;
Console.WriteLine(a + (double)b);
Console.WriteLine((decimal)a + b);
You can use either standard numeric format strings or custom numeric format strings to format a floating-point value.
Real literals
The type of a real literal is determined by its suffix as follows:
- The literal without suffix or with the
d
orD
suffix is of typedouble
- The literal with the
f
orF
suffix is of typefloat
- The literal with the
m
orM
suffix is of typedecimal
The following code demonstrates an example of each:
double d = 3D;
d = 4d;
d = 3.934_001;
float f = 3_000.5F;
f = 5.4f;
decimal myMoney = 3_000.5m;
myMoney = 400.75M;
The preceding example also shows the use of _
as a digit separator. You can use the digit separator with all kinds of numeric literals.
You can also use scientific notation, that is, specify an exponent part of a real literal, as the following example shows:
double d = 0.42e2;
Console.WriteLine(d); // output 42
float f = 134.45E-2f;
Console.WriteLine(f); // output: 1.3445
decimal m = 1.5E6m;
Console.WriteLine(m); // output: 1500000
Conversions
There is only one implicit conversion between floating-point numeric types: from float
to double
. However, you can convert any floating-point type to any other floating-point type with the explicit cast. For more information, see Built-in numeric conversions.
C# language specification
For more information, see the following sections of the C# language specification: