Equal Numbers: Difference between revisions
|  (Adapted "How to determine if a number is valid, NaN or Inf?" article from old wiki) |  (Fixed Typo) | ||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
| : [[File:precise-equals.jpg|thumb|none|Does not have the same issue as the example above]] | : [[File:precise-equals.jpg|thumb|none|Does not have the same issue as the example above]] | ||
| * You can check whether a number is valid by checking whether it is equal to itself. <code>nan</code>, <code>inf</code>  | * You can check whether a number is valid by checking whether it is equal to itself. <code>nan</code>, <code>inf</code> and <code>-inf</code> are not considered equal to themselves because they represent a set of numbers. | ||
| : [[File:Equal_nan_inf.png|thumb|none|NaN and Infinity are not equal to themselves]] | : [[File:Equal_nan_inf.png|thumb|none|NaN and Infinity are not equal to themselves]] | ||
| [[Category:Blocks]] | [[Category:Blocks]] | ||
Revision as of 15:36, 17 July 2024
Equal Numbers
  | Type | Script block | 
| Collider | None | 
| Folder | Math | 
| Ports | |
|---|---|
| Inputs | Num1 Num2 | 
| Outputs | Num1 = Num2 | 
Outputs True if both number inputs are equal, and false if they are not.

Notes
- The numbers do not have to be actually equal to be considered equal, they have to be close enough.
- If high precision is required, the following script can be used:
- You can check whether a number is valid by checking whether it is equal to itself. nan,infand-infare not considered equal to themselves because they represent a set of numbers.
 
	


