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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T19:11:28+00:00 2026-05-15T19:11:28+00:00

I was trying to understand the floating point representation in C using this code

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I was trying to understand the floating point representation in C using this code (both float and int are 4 bytes on my machine):

int x = 3;
float y = *(float*) &x;
printf("%d %e \n", x, y);

We know that the binary representation of x will be the following

00000000000000000000000000000011

Therefore I would have expected y to be represented as follows

  • Sign bit (first bit from left) = 0

  • Exponent (bits 2-9 from left) = 0

  • Mantissa (bits 10-32): 1 + 2^(-22)+2^(-23)

Leading to y = (-1)^0 * 2^(0-127) * (1+2^(-22) + 2^(-23)) = 5.87747E-39

My program however prints out

3 4.203895e-45

That is, y has the value 4.203895e-45 instead of 5.87747E-39 as I expected. Why does this happen. What am I doing wrong?

P.S. I have also printed the values directly from gdb so it is not a problem with the printf command.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T19:11:28+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:11 pm

    IEEE floating point numbers with exponent fields of all 0 are ‘denormalized’. This means that the implicit 1 in front of the mantissa no longer is active. This allows really small numbers to be represented. See This wikipedia article for more explanation. In your example the result would be 3 * 2^-149

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