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Home/ Questions/Q 6220931
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T08:02:43+00:00 2026-05-24T08:02:43+00:00

I would expect all below comparisons to be bool (true) but they are not.

  • 0

I would expect all below comparisons to be bool (true) but they are not.
Can anyone explain this?

test.php

<?php

$f = 12;
$f += 5.95;
$f += 5.95;
$f += 5.95;

echo 'var_dump($f) = ';
var_dump($f);

echo 'var_dump($f == \'29.85\') = ';
var_dump($f == '29.85');

echo 'var_dump($f == 29.85) = ';
var_dump($f == 29.85);

echo 'var_dump($f == (float)\'29.85\') = ';
var_dump($f == (float)'29.85');

echo 'var_dump($f == \'29.85\') = ';
var_dump((string)$f == '29.85');

echo 'var_dump(round($f, 2) == \'29.85\') = ';
var_dump(round($f, 2) == '29.85');

$ php test.php

var_dump($f) = float(29.85)
var_dump($f == '29.85') = bool(false)
var_dump($f == 29.85) = bool(false)
var_dump($f == (float)'29.85') = bool(false)
var_dump($f == '29.85') = bool(true)
var_dump(round($f, 2) == '29.85') = bool(true)

$ php -v

PHP 5.2.14 (cli) (built: Jul 23 2010 15:23:00)
Copyright (c) 1997-2010 The PHP Group
Zend Engine v2.2.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2010 Zend Technologies
    with Xdebug v2.1.0, Copyright (c) 2002-2010, by Derick Rethans
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T08:02:45+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 8:02 am

    Floating point numbers have limited precision. Although it depends on
    the system, PHP typically uses the IEEE 754 double precision format,
    which will give a maximum relative error due to rounding in the order
    of 1.11e-16. Non elementary arithmetic operations may give larger
    errors, and, of course, error progragation must be considered when
    several operations are compounded.

    Additionally, rational numbers that are exactly representable as
    floating point numbers in base 10, like 0.1 or 0.7, do not have an
    exact representation as floating point numbers in base 2, which is
    used internally, no matter the size of the mantissa. Hence, they
    cannot be converted into their internal binary counterparts without a
    small loss of precision. This can lead to confusing results: for
    example, floor((0.1+0.7)*10) will usually return 7 instead of the
    expected 8, since the internal representation will be something like
    7.9999999999999991118….

    So never trust floating number results to the last digit, and never
    compare floating point numbers for equality.

    PHP documentation page

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