Convert the Number 99.026 9 to 32 Bit Single Precision IEEE 754 Binary Floating Point Representation Standard, From a Base 10 Decimal System Number. Detailed Explanations

Number 99.026 9(10) converted and written in 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation (1 bit for sign, 8 bits for exponent, 23 bits for mantissa)

The first steps we'll go through to make the conversion:

Convert to binary (to base 2) the integer part of the number.

Convert to binary the fractional part of the number.


1. First, convert to binary (in base 2) the integer part: 99.
Divide the number repeatedly by 2.

Keep track of each remainder.

We stop when we get a quotient that is equal to zero.


  • division = quotient + remainder;
  • 99 ÷ 2 = 49 + 1;
  • 49 ÷ 2 = 24 + 1;
  • 24 ÷ 2 = 12 + 0;
  • 12 ÷ 2 = 6 + 0;
  • 6 ÷ 2 = 3 + 0;
  • 3 ÷ 2 = 1 + 1;
  • 1 ÷ 2 = 0 + 1;

2. Construct the base 2 representation of the integer part of the number.

Take all the remainders starting from the bottom of the list constructed above.


99(10) =


110 0011(2)


3. Convert to binary (base 2) the fractional part: 0.026 9.

Multiply it repeatedly by 2.


Keep track of each integer part of the results.


Stop when we get a fractional part that is equal to zero.


  • #) multiplying = integer + fractional part;
  • 1) 0.026 9 × 2 = 0 + 0.053 8;
  • 2) 0.053 8 × 2 = 0 + 0.107 6;
  • 3) 0.107 6 × 2 = 0 + 0.215 2;
  • 4) 0.215 2 × 2 = 0 + 0.430 4;
  • 5) 0.430 4 × 2 = 0 + 0.860 8;
  • 6) 0.860 8 × 2 = 1 + 0.721 6;
  • 7) 0.721 6 × 2 = 1 + 0.443 2;
  • 8) 0.443 2 × 2 = 0 + 0.886 4;
  • 9) 0.886 4 × 2 = 1 + 0.772 8;
  • 10) 0.772 8 × 2 = 1 + 0.545 6;
  • 11) 0.545 6 × 2 = 1 + 0.091 2;
  • 12) 0.091 2 × 2 = 0 + 0.182 4;
  • 13) 0.182 4 × 2 = 0 + 0.364 8;
  • 14) 0.364 8 × 2 = 0 + 0.729 6;
  • 15) 0.729 6 × 2 = 1 + 0.459 2;
  • 16) 0.459 2 × 2 = 0 + 0.918 4;
  • 17) 0.918 4 × 2 = 1 + 0.836 8;
  • 18) 0.836 8 × 2 = 1 + 0.673 6;
  • 19) 0.673 6 × 2 = 1 + 0.347 2;
  • 20) 0.347 2 × 2 = 0 + 0.694 4;
  • 21) 0.694 4 × 2 = 1 + 0.388 8;
  • 22) 0.388 8 × 2 = 0 + 0.777 6;
  • 23) 0.777 6 × 2 = 1 + 0.555 2;
  • 24) 0.555 2 × 2 = 1 + 0.110 4;

We didn't get any fractional part that was equal to zero. But we had enough iterations (over Mantissa limit) and at least one integer that was different from zero => FULL STOP (losing precision...)


4. Construct the base 2 representation of the fractional part of the number.

Take all the integer parts of the multiplying operations, starting from the top of the constructed list above:


0.026 9(10) =


0.0000 0110 1110 0010 1110 1011(2)


5. Positive number before normalization:

99.026 9(10) =


110 0011.0000 0110 1110 0010 1110 1011(2)


The last steps we'll go through to make the conversion:

Normalize the binary representation of the number.

Adjust the exponent.

Convert the adjusted exponent from the decimal (base 10) to 8 bit binary.

Normalize the mantissa.


6. Normalize the binary representation of the number.

Shift the decimal mark 6 positions to the left, so that only one non zero digit remains to the left of it:


99.026 9(10) =


110 0011.0000 0110 1110 0010 1110 1011(2) =


110 0011.0000 0110 1110 0010 1110 1011(2) × 20 =


1.1000 1100 0001 1011 1000 1011 1010 11(2) × 26


7. Up to this moment, there are the following elements that would feed into the 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation:

Sign 0 (a positive number)


Exponent (unadjusted): 6


Mantissa (not normalized):
1.1000 1100 0001 1011 1000 1011 1010 11


8. Adjust the exponent.

Use the 8 bit excess/bias notation:


Exponent (adjusted) =


Exponent (unadjusted) + 2(8-1) - 1 =


6 + 2(8-1) - 1 =


(6 + 127)(10) =


133(10)


9. Convert the adjusted exponent from the decimal (base 10) to 8 bit binary.

Use the same technique of repeatedly dividing by 2:


  • division = quotient + remainder;
  • 133 ÷ 2 = 66 + 1;
  • 66 ÷ 2 = 33 + 0;
  • 33 ÷ 2 = 16 + 1;
  • 16 ÷ 2 = 8 + 0;
  • 8 ÷ 2 = 4 + 0;
  • 4 ÷ 2 = 2 + 0;
  • 2 ÷ 2 = 1 + 0;
  • 1 ÷ 2 = 0 + 1;

10. Construct the base 2 representation of the adjusted exponent.

Take all the remainders starting from the bottom of the list constructed above.


Exponent (adjusted) =


133(10) =


1000 0101(2)


11. Normalize the mantissa.

a) Remove the leading (the leftmost) bit, since it's allways 1, and the decimal point, if the case.


b) Adjust its length to 23 bits, by removing the excess bits, from the right (if any of the excess bits is set on 1, we are losing precision...).


Mantissa (normalized) =


1. 100 0110 0000 1101 1100 0101 110 1011 =


100 0110 0000 1101 1100 0101


12. The three elements that make up the number's 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation:

Sign (1 bit) =
0 (a positive number)


Exponent (8 bits) =
1000 0101


Mantissa (23 bits) =
100 0110 0000 1101 1100 0101


The base ten decimal number 99.026 9 converted and written in 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation:
0 - 1000 0101 - 100 0110 0000 1101 1100 0101

(32 bits IEEE 754)

Number 99.026 8 converted from decimal system (base 10) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation = ?

Number 99.027 converted from decimal system (base 10) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation = ?

Convert to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard

A number in 64 bit double precision IEEE 754 binary floating point standard representation requires three building elements: sign (it takes 1 bit and it's either 0 for positive or 1 for negative numbers), exponent (11 bits), mantissa (52 bits)

The latest decimal numbers converted from base ten to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 floating point binary standard representation

Number 99.026 9 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 1 793 738 585 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 110 011 001 100 123 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 82 163 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number -3 277.789 66 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 65.454 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number -1.413 5 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 140 702 789 476 868 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 4 612 811 918 334 230 547 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
Number 10 101 110 111 010 100 100 000 000 000 036 converted from decimal system (written in base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point representation standard Oct 03 15:14 UTC (GMT)
All base ten decimal numbers converted to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point

How to convert decimal numbers from base ten to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point standard

Follow the steps below to convert a base 10 decimal number to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point:

Example: convert the negative number -25.347 from decimal system (base ten) to 32 bit single precision IEEE 754 binary floating point:

Available Base Conversions Between Decimal and Binary Systems

Conversions Between Decimal System Numbers (Written in Base Ten) and Binary System Numbers (Base Two and Computer Representation):


1. Integer -> Binary

2. Decimal -> Binary

3. Binary -> Integer

4. Binary -> Decimal