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by wfleming
226 days ago
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We’re in very nitpicky terminology weeds here (and I’m not the person you’re replying to), but my understanding is “commutative” is specifically about reordering operands of one binary op (4+3 == 3+4), while “associative” is about reordering a longer chain of the same operation (1+2+3 == 1+3+2). Edit: Wikipedia actually says associativity is definitionally about changing parens[0]. Mostly amounts to the same thing for standard arithmetic operators, but it’s an interesting distinction. [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associative_property |
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Rounding and eventual underflow in IEEE means an expression X•Y for any algebraic operation • produces, if finite, a result (X•Y)·( 1 + ß ) + µ where |µ| cannot exceed half the smallest gap between numbers in the destination’s format, and |ß| < 2^-N , and ß·µ = 0 . ( µ ≠ 0 only when Underflow occurs.)
And yes that is a binary relation only
a•b•c is really (a•b)•c assuming left operator associativity, one of the properties that IEEE doesn't have.