16.8 Summary
-  Most computer arithmetic is done using either integers or floating-point
values.  Standard awkuses double-precision
floating-point values.
-  In the early 1990s Barbie mistakenly said, “Math class is tough!”
Although math isn’t tough, floating-point arithmetic isn’t the same
as pencil-and-paper math, and care must be taken:
- - Not all numbers can be represented exactly.
- - Comparing values should use a delta, instead of being done directly
with ‘==’ and ‘!=’.
- - Errors accumulate.
- - Operations are not always truly associative or distributive.
 
-  Increasing the accuracy can help, but it is not a panacea.
-  Often, increasing the accuracy and then rounding to the desired
number of digits produces reasonable results.
-  Use -M (or --bignum) to enable MPFR
arithmetic. Use PRECto set the precision in bits, andROUNDMODEto set the IEEE 754 rounding mode.
-  With -M, gawkperforms
arbitrary-precision integer arithmetic using the GMP library.
This is faster and more space-efficient than using MPFR for
the same calculations.
-  There are several areas with respect to floating-point
numbers where gawkdisagrees with the POSIX standard.
It pays to be aware of them.
-  Overall, there is no need to be unduly suspicious about the results from
floating-point arithmetic. The lesson to remember is that floating-point
arithmetic is always more complex than arithmetic using pencil and
paper. In order to take advantage of the power of floating-point arithmetic,
you need to know its limitations and work within them. For most casual
use of floating-point arithmetic, you will often get the expected result
if you simply round the display of your final results to the correct number
of significant decimal digits.
-  As general advice, avoid presenting numerical data in a manner that
implies better precision than is actually the case.