From: matz@... Date: 2018-03-15T05:43:10+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:86119] [Ruby trunk Feature#14362][Rejected] use BigDecimal instead of Float by default Issue #14362 has been updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto). Status changed from Open to Rejected Rejected. Unfortunately, the incompatibility this proposal would bring is too big. Besides that, we have performance concern too. Matz. ---------------------------------------- Feature #14362: use BigDecimal instead of Float by default https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14362#change-70993 * Author: AaronLasseigne (Aaron Lasseigne) * Status: Rejected * Priority: Normal * Assignee: * Target version: ---------------------------------------- When writing a decimal the default type assigned is `Float`: ```ruby > 1.2.class => Float ``` This is great for memory savings and for application speed but it comes with accuracy issues: ```ruby > 129.95 * 100 => 12994.999999999998 ``` Ruby's own `BigDecimal` docs say: > Decimal arithmetic is also useful for general calculation, because it provides the correct answers people expect���whereas normal binary floating point arithmetic often introduces subtle errors because of the conversion between base 10 and base 2. What if `BigDecimal` was moved into the Ruby core and made the default for numbers like `1.2`? ```ruby > 1.2.class => BigDecimal ``` I realize this goes against the 3x3 goal but I think `BigDecimal` is preferable over `Float` for developer happiness. I've seen lots of developers stumble when first learning about the pitfalls of `Float`. I've see test suites where a range is tested for because of answers like `12994.999999999998` instead of `12995.0`. At one point trading accuracy for performance made sense. I'm not sure that's still the case today. Right now a decimal generates the faster and less accurate `Float`. Developers have to opt-in to the slower but safer `BigDecimal` by manually requesting a `BigDecimal`. By flipping this we default to the safer version and ask developers to opt-in to the faster but less accurate `Float` if needed. ```ruby > 1.2.class => Decimal > Float.new('1.2') => 1.2 ``` There could also be a shorthand for float where the number is followed by an `f` (similar to Rational). ```ruby 1.2f # => Float ``` The change would help "provide the correct answers people expect". The change would be mostly seamless from an interface standpoint. The only methods on `Float` and not on `BigDecimal` appear to be `rationalize`, `next_float`, and `prev_float`. I suspect those methods are rarely used. The increased accuracy seems unlikely to cause code issues for people. The two largest downsides that I can come up with are speed and display. I'm not sure what kind of hit is taken by handling all decimals as `BigDecimal`. Would an average Rails application see a large hit? Additionally, the display value of `BigDecimal` is engineering notation. This is also the default produced by `to_s`. It's harder to read and might mess up code by displaying things like "0.125e2" instead of "12.5". Certainly the default produced by `to_s` could change to the conventional floating point notation. A change this significant would likely target Ruby 3 so there would be time to make some changes like adding a `BigDecimal#rationalize` method or changing the default output of `BigDecimal#to_s`. Thank you for considering this. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: