I was wondering how can I subtract two negative Floating-Point numbers in javascript. I tried:
alert(-0.2-0.1);
and the result is -0.
The reason of your problem is explained here: Why does modulus operator return fractional number in javascript?
A possible solution could be:
<script type="text/javascript">
var result = (-20-10)/100;
alert("My result is "+result);
</script>
Another possible solution might be this:
Number((-0.2-0.1).toFixed(x))
Where x should be the tolerance in decimals you'd like.
Running this with an x
of 16, gives me an output of -0.3
.
-0.3 === Number((-0.2-0.1).toFixed(16)) // true, and also with every 0 < x < 16
Let me know.
No, nothing wrong with your code, most decimal fractions cannot be represented exactly in binary, use
number.toFixed(x)
Where x
is the number of decimals you want and number
is the result of the subtraction.
toFixed()
is what you must be looking for.
E.g
number.toFixed(x);
where x is the number of digits after the decimal point. It is optional with default value of 0.
More here : Javascript Number.toFixed() Method
You are doing nothing wrong, what you are seeing is the side effect of computers storing numbers in base 2. In base 10, 1/3 can't be precisely represented: .33333333 (with a bar over the 3). The same is true for 1/10 and 1/5 in base 2 or binary. The answer you see is merely the result of a rounding error. If you are working with money, it is often advised to just store values as cents to avoid some floating point errors.
As far as fixing the result you can do something like:
var SIGDIG= 100000000;
alert( Math.floor((-0.2-0.1)*SIGDIG)/SIGDIG );