Re: converting float to double
On 21 Dec 2006 12:45:04 GMT, in comp.lang.c , richard@cogsci. ed.ac.uk
(Richard Tobin) wrote:
Not as far as financial markets are concerned.
Bear in mind that to someone from say Ethiopia, a hundred bucks is a
large amount.
What my last sentence indicated was that banks *routinely* perform
significantly larger transactions, and in that context, 10Bn is small.
If you can be *rsed, look at http://www.lchclearnet.com/
A press release indicates a transaction volume of 408Tn in 2005.
LCH.Clearnet is merely one of many such exchanges. Its fairly easy to
see that a year's global business would overflow 64-bits, and to
retain enough accounts for GAAP rules would be way beyond it...
--
Mark McIntyre
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it."
--Brian Kernighan
On 21 Dec 2006 12:45:04 GMT, in comp.lang.c , richard@cogsci. ed.ac.uk
(Richard Tobin) wrote:
>In article <1stko2huvfens5 o6rj482qf8d6irr fhsim@4ax.com>,
>Mark McIntyre <markmcintyre@s pamcop.netwrote :
>
>
>10 billion dollars *is* a large amount.
>Mark McIntyre <markmcintyre@s pamcop.netwrote :
>
>>10Bn dollars is not a large amount. Some LCH Repoclear members will be
>>settling transactions with LCH.Clearnet for around a trillion GBP each
>>day.
>>settling transactions with LCH.Clearnet for around a trillion GBP each
>>day.
>10 billion dollars *is* a large amount.
Bear in mind that to someone from say Ethiopia, a hundred bucks is a
large amount.
>The existence of larger amounts is not relevant,
>assuming that's what your last sentence
>implies
>assuming that's what your last sentence
>implies
significantly larger transactions, and in that context, 10Bn is small.
>(it contains too many names I've never heard before to be
>sure).
>sure).
A press release indicates a transaction volume of 408Tn in 2005.
LCH.Clearnet is merely one of many such exchanges. Its fairly easy to
see that a year's global business would overflow 64-bits, and to
retain enough accounts for GAAP rules would be way beyond it...
--
Mark McIntyre
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it."
--Brian Kernighan
Comment