I was just surprised that BOOST_CHECK_BITWISE_EQUAL does not simply take two memory ranges and compares them bitwise, but requires integers (or types that support bit shifting). I wanted to compare two floats after binary deserialization and wanted to make sure all bits had been placed correctly, before doing value comparison. What I came up with now is a reinterpret_cast to uint8_t* and then using bitwise comparison byte for byte. I would have expected the test framework to do exactly that internally. Is comparing anything besides integers bitwise considered a bad practice or is there another reason for this limitation of BITWISE_EQUAL? If there is a rationale could that be documented at [0], since the documentation currently only speaks of unconstrained "values". thanks, Norbert [0] http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_63_0/libs/test/doc/html/boost_test/utf_refer...