I should clarify, I suspect that it is being configure as doubles, but
I could be mistaken. Instead I need to find out whether it's possible
to set it up as single-precision float. Or does the fact that the
high-resolution nature of Chrono steady-clock "long long int" preclude
that?
On Fri, Aug 30, 2013 at 6:34 PM, Brian Budge
On Fri, Aug 30, 2013 at 4:26 PM, Michael Powell
wrote: Hello,
Or any of the chrono-steady-clock-based time units...
I am noticing some what appear to be rounding errors outputting resulting millisecond values using the boost::chrono::milliseconds(x).
It's a design-decision, most if not all of our floating-point values are single-precision-float, don't need to be double-precision-float.
When we output the milliseconds(x).count() values, however, what I am finding is that the values are sometimes inaccurate, the same value in 3.0, for instance, output as 2.99995, stuff like this.
Is there a way to tell milliseconds what precision floating point it is? float or double?
We are targeting ARM, BTW, without hardware floating point support, which is the main reason, I'd like to keep things single-precision float, if at all possible.
Hi Michael -
I don't know the answer to this question (can chrono be configured to use doubles); however, I thought it might be useful to point out that when you're talking about 5 decimal digits of precision at milliseconds, you're only going to be off by a couple of tens of nanoseconds, which is likely less than the precision of any timer on the system.
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