Floating Point Denormals, Insignificant But Controversial
Denormal floating point numbers and gradual underflow are an underappreciated feature of the IEEE floating point standard. Double precision denormals are so tiny that they are rarely numerically significant, but single precision denormals can be in the range where they affect some otherwise unremarkable computations. Historically, gradual underflow proved to be very controversial during the committee deliberations that developed the standard.
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Normalized Floating Point Numbers
My previous post was mostly about normalized floating point numbers. Recall that normalized numbers can be expressed as $$ x = \pm (1 + f) \cdot 2^e $$ The fraction or mantissa $f$ satisfies $$ 0 \leq f < 1 $$ $f$ must be representable in binary using at most 52 bits for double precision and 23 bits for single precision. The exponent $e$ is an integer in the interval $$ -e_{max} < e \leq e_{max} $$ where $e_{max} = 1023$ for double precision and $e_{max} = 127$ for single precision. The finiteness of $f$ is a limitation on precision. The finiteness of $e$ is a limitation on range. Any numbers that don't meet these limitations must be approximated by ones that do.Floating Point Format
Double precision floating point numbers are stored in a 64-bit word, with 52 bits for $f$, 11 bits for $e$, and 1 bit for the sign of the number. The sign of $e$ is accommodated by storing $e+e_{max}$, which is between $1$ and $2^{11}-2$. Single precision floating point numbers are stored in a 32-bit word, with 23 bits for $f$, 8 bits for $e$, and 1 bit for the sign of the number. The sign of $e$ is accommodated by storing $e+e_{max}$, which is between $1$ and $2^{8}-2$. The two extreme values of the exponent field, all zeroes and all ones, are special cases. All zeroes signifies a denormal floating point number, the subject of today's post. All ones, together with a zero fraction, denotes infinity, or Inf. And all ones, together with a a nonzero fraction, denotes Not-A-Number, or NaN.floatgui
My program floatgui, available here, shows the distribution of the positive numbers in a model floating point system with variable parameters. The parameter $t$ specifies the number of bits used to store $f$, so $2^t f$ is an integer. The parameters $e_{min}$ and $e_{max}$ specify the range of the exponent.Gap Around Zero
If you look carefully at the output from floatgui shown in the previous post you will see a gap around zero. This is especially apparent in the logarithmic plot, because the logarithmic distribution can never reach zero. Here is output for slightly different parameters, $t = 3$, $e_{min} = -5$, and $e_{max} = 2$. Howrever, the gap around zero has been filled in with a spot of green. Those are the denormals.Zoom In
Zoom in on the portion of these toy floating point numbers less than one-half. Now you can see the individual green denormals -- there are eight of them in this case.Denormal Floating Point Numbers
Denormal floating point numbers are essentially roundoff errors in normalized numbers near the underflow limit, realmin, which is $2^{-e_{max}+1}$. They are equally spaced, with a spacing of eps*realmin. Zero is naturally included as the smallest denormal. Suppose that x and y are two distinct floating point numbers near to, but larger than, realmin. It may well be that their difference, x - y, is smaller than realmin. For example, in the small floatgui system pictured above, eps = 1/8 and realmin = 1/32. The quantities x = 6/128 and y = 5/128 are between 1/32 and 1/16, so they are both above underflow. But x - y = 1/128 underflows to produce one of the green denormals. Before the IEEE standard, and even on today's systems that do not comply with the standard, underflows would simply be set to zero. So it would be possible to have the MATLAB expressionx == ybe false, while the expression
x - y == 0be true. On machines where underflow flushes to zero and division by zero is fatal, this code fragment can produce a division by zero and crash.
if x ~= y z = 1/(x-y); endOf course, denormals can also be produced by multiplications and divisions that produce a result between eps*realmin and realmin. In decimal these ranges are
format compact format short e [eps*realmin realmin] [eps('single')*realmin('single') realmin('single')]
ans = 4.9407e-324 2.2251e-308 ans = 1.4013e-45 1.1755e-38
Denormal Format
Denormal floating point numbers are stored without the implicit leading one bit, $$ x = \pm f \cdot 2^{-emax+1}$$ The fraction $f$ satisfies $$ 0 \leq f < 1 $$ And $f$ is represented in binary using 52 bits for double precision and 23 bits for single recision. Note that zero naturally occurs as a denormal. When you look at a double precision denormal with format hex the situation is fairly clear. The rightmost 13 hex characters are the 52 bits of the fraction. The leading bit is the sign. The other 12 bits of the first three hex characters are all zero because they represent the biased exponent, which is zero because $emax$ and the exponent bias were chosen to complement each other. Here are the two largest and two smallest nonzero double precision denormals.format hex [(1-eps); (1-2*eps); 2*eps; eps; 0]*realmin format long e ans
ans = 000fffffffffffff 000ffffffffffffe 0000000000000002 0000000000000001 0000000000000000 ans = 2.225073858507201e-308 2.225073858507200e-308 9.881312916824931e-324 4.940656458412465e-324 0The situation is slightly more complicated with single precision because 23 is not a multiple of four. The fraction and exponent fields of a single precision floating point number -- normal or denormal -- share the bits in the third character of the hex display; the biased exponent gets one bit and the first three bits of the 23 bit fraction get the other three. Here are the two largest and two smallest nonzero single precision denormals.
format hex e = eps('single'); r = realmin('single'); [(1-e); (1-2*e); 2*e; e; 0]*r format short e ans
ans = 007fffff 007ffffe 00000002 00000001 00000000 ans = 1.1755e-38 1.1755e-38 2.8026e-45 1.4013e-45 0Think of the situation this way. The normalized floating point numbers immediately to the right of realmin, between realmin and 2*realmin, are equally spaced with a spacing of eps*realmin. If just as many numbers, with just the same spacing, are placed to the left of realmin, they fill in the gap between there and zero. These are the denormals. They require a slightly different format to represent and slightly different hardware to process.
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