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Normal number (computing)
- A different topic is treated in the article titled normal number.
In computing, a normal number is a non-zero number in a floating-point representation which is within the balanced range supported by a given floating-point format.
The magnitude of the smallest normal number in a format is given by bemin, where b is the base (radix) of the format (usually 2 or 10) and emin depends on the size and layout of the format.
Similarly, the magnitude of the largest normal number in a format is given by
- bemax × (b − b1−p),
where p is the precision of the format in digits and emax is (−emin)+1.
In the IEEE 754 binary and proposed decimal formats, p, emin, and emax have the following values:
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For example, in the smallest decimal format, the range of positive normal numbers is 10−95 through 9.999999 × 1096.
Non-zero numbers smaller in magnitude than the smallest normal number are called denormalized numbers or subnormal numbers. Zero is neither normal nor subnormal.
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