Floating point representations are per-architecture, not per-platform.
That is, as long as you are using an x86 CPU, it will work. If you are
compiling on a 64-bit computer, that might be it, but I don't know much
about what happens when you compile Source.
On 3/24/2011 4:57 PM, Maarten De Meyer wrote:
there, that should do it as far as keywords go for future generations,
might save someone a good night's sleep.
FYI: The IS_NAN macro doesn't work on all platforms. Or the extern
const int nanmask; is. Or it's wrong somewhere. But don't depend on
IS_NAN on linux, it gives false positives. If anyone has an
intelligent explanation on this, it'd be nice. My hypothesis is that
the internal representation of floating points may differ on different
platforms?
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