The FLOAT data type is used to store a floating-point number, which can be single or double precision.
FLOAT [ ( precision ) ]
precision An integer expression that specifies the number of bits in the mantissa. A mantissa is the decimal part of a logarithm. For example, in the logarithm 5.63428, the mantissa is 0.63428. The IEEE standard 754 floating-point precision is as follows:
Supplied precision value | Decimal precision | Equivalent SQL data type | Storage size |
---|---|---|---|
1-24 | 7 decimal digits | REAL | 4 bytes |
25-53 | 15 decimal digits | DOUBLE | 8 bytes |
When a column is created using the FLOAT ( precision ) data type, columns on all platforms are guaranteed to hold the values to at least the specified minimum precision. In contrast, REAL and DOUBLE do not guarantee a platform-independent minimum precision.
If precision is not supplied, the FLOAT data type is a single-precision floating-point number, equivalent to the REAL data type, and requires 4 bytes of storage.
If precision is supplied, the FLOAT data type is either single or double precision, depending on the value of precision specified. The cutoff between REAL and DOUBLE is platform-dependent. Single-precision FLOAT values require 4 bytes of storage, and double-precision FLOAT values require 8 bytes.
The FLOAT data type is an approximate numeric data type. It is subject to rounding errors after arithmetic operations. The approximate nature of FLOAT values means that queries using equalities should generally be avoided when comparing FLOAT values.
SQL/2008 The FLOAT type is a core feature of the SQL/2008 standard.
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