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Home/ Questions/Q 6990689
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T19:23:20+00:00 2026-05-27T19:23:20+00:00

I have this code that throws a math domain error exception: v = -1.0

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I have this code that throws a math domain error exception:

v = -1.0

for i in range (201):
    print acos (v)
    v += 0.01

But if I change it to this, it works:

v = -100

for i in range (201):
    print acos (v / 100.0)
    v += 1

Is this because of rounding?

How to best solve this in Python? Or should I just do it like my last example?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T19:23:21+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 7:23 pm

    If you do:

    >>> format(0.01, '.30f')
    '0.010000000000000000208166817117'
    

    you can see that 0.01 (as a floating point number with double precision) is bigger than the number 0.01 you learned at school.

    So, when you sum it 100 times, the error gets bigger:

    >>> sum([0.01]*100)
    1.0000000000000007
    

    And that’s enough to give a math domain error.

    What can you do?

    • Use the second code
    • round() it to less decimal points:

    .

    >>> round(1.0000000000000007, 13)
    1.0
    

    13 or 14 may be enough.

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