On 03/06/2013 07:16 PM, François Beausoleil wrote:
Le 2013-03-06 à 21:42, Tony Dare a écrit :

I'm taking an standard deviation of a population and subtracting it from the 
average of the same population and rounding the result. Sometimes that result 
is negative and rounding it returns (or shows up as) a negative zero (-0) in a 
SELECT.

basically:
SELECT
  client_name, avg(rpt_cnt),
  stddev_pop(rpt_cnt),
  round(avg(rpt_cnt) - stddev_pop(rpt_cnt))
from client_counts
group by client_name

and what I sometimes get is :
  client_name | a dp number | a dp number | -0

In postgresql-world, is -0 = 0?  Can I use that negative 0 in further 
calculations without fear?  Is this a bug?
This is related to the recent discussion of floating point values on this 
mailing list. You can read more about IEEE 754 and whether 0 == -0 on 
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signed_zero#Comparisons

According to that article, IEEE 754 specifies that 0 == -0 in Java/C/etc.

Hope that helps!
François Beausoleil
This is happening in a plpgsql function, so I guess that makes it C, under the hood. That does help, thank you.


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