FlexFloat is designed to run where others may walk; and its internal 
axiomatics provide some fundament for thick-edged, thin-walled 
multidimensional focus.

It should be simple to use statelessly, which happens when one constructs 
point, 'fat' point, or interval values using: clcl(), clop(), opcl(), 
opop() for { [..], [..), (..], (..) }.

The statefulness is available should one want value-spans that 
self-identify either as exact or as inexact; anyone coding a 
fixed-precision riff on Unums may like that.

ValidatedNumerics is a good and reliable package -- I used it when testing 
this, and continue to recommend it.  Their work is validated, mine is fun.



On Friday, December 11, 2015 at 6:04:24 AM UTC-5, Simon Byrne wrote:
>
> Thanks Jeffrey it looks interesting. How does this compare to 
> ValidatedNumerics.jl?
> https://github.com/dpsanders/ValidatedNumerics.jl
>
> -simon
>
> On Friday, 11 December 2015 05:09:27 UTC, Jeffrey Sarnoff wrote:
>>
>> FlexFloat <https://github.com/J-Sarnoff/FlexFloat.jl> is available -- 
>> see the front page for a better sense of its purpose.
>>
>>

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