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Home/ Questions/Q 4076122
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T17:23:06+00:00 2026-05-20T17:23:06+00:00

From MSDN : A decimal number is a signed, fixed-point value consisting of an

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From MSDN:

A decimal number is a signed,
fixed-point value consisting of an
integral part and an optional
fractional part. The integral and
fractional parts consist of a series
of digits that range from zero to nine
(0 to 9), separated by a decimal point
symbol.

I thought it was a floating point number with base 10.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T17:23:07+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 5:23 pm

    If you change the version of the Framework the description changes:

    With 4.0

    A decimal number is a floating-point
    value that consists of a sign, a
    numeric value where each digit in the
    value ranges from 0 to 9, and a
    scaling factor that indicates the
    position of a floating decimal point
    that separates the integral and
    fractional parts of the numeric value.

    I’ll say it’s sloppy editing of the 1.1 version.

    And even in 1.1 in the next paragraph it’s written:

    The binary representation of an
    instance of Decimal consists of a
    1-bit sign, a 96-bit integer number,
    and a scaling factor used to divide
    the 96-bit integer and specify what
    portion of it is a decimal fraction.
    The scaling factor is implicitly the
    number 10, raised to an exponent
    ranging from 0 to 28.

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