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Home/ Questions/Q 204789
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T17:29:56+00:00 2026-05-11T17:29:56+00:00

I have some C# unit tests that perform some float/double operations and I would

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I have some C# unit tests that perform some float/double operations and I would like to unit test them. Assert.AreEqual is insufficient because of rounding errors.

Take unit conversion as an example. 10.5 meters to feet has a conversion factor of 3.281 so I get 34.4505. Using a more accurate conversion factor gives me 34.4488189. I want to test this within, say, 0.1 (so 34.3488-34.5488 would pass the test).

I could certain manually test the value with a tolerance in my unit test but that’s highly repetitive and the failure message wouldn’t be very descriptive (again without having to write my own Assert failure message):

Assert.IsTrue(Math.Abs(34.4488189 - value) < 0.1);

How can I unit test my float operations to within a certain error tolerance? I cannot find any Assert classes that do this that come with VS. Am I missing it or do I have to roll my own?

Are there standard practices in testing floats/doubles to keep in mind?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T17:29:56+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 5:29 pm

    Assert.AreEqual in MSTest has overloads that accept a delta (error tolerance) parameter:

    public static void AreEqual (double expected, double actual, double delta)
    

    for example:

    Assert.AreEqual(34.4488189, value, 0.1);
    

    or, for the smallest possible tolerance:

    Assert.AreEqual(34.4488189, value, double.Epsilon);
    
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