Double
  public
  
  final
  
  class
  Double
  
  
  
  
    extends Number
  
  
  
  
  
      implements
      
        Comparable<Double>
      
  
  
| java.lang.Object | ||
| ↳ | java.lang.Number | |
| ↳ | java.lang.Double | |
The Double class wraps a value of the primitive type
 double in an object. An object of type
 Double contains a single field whose type is
 double.
 
In addition, this class provides several methods for converting a
 double to a String and a
 String to a double, as well as other
 constants and methods useful when dealing with a
 double.
 
 
Floating-point Equality, Equivalence, and Comparison
IEEE 754 floating-point values include finite nonzero values, signed zeros (+0.0 and -0.0), signed infinities
 positive infinity and
 negative infinity), and
 NaN (not-a-number).
 An equivalence relation on a set of values is a boolean
 relation on pairs of values that is reflexive, symmetric, and
 transitive. For more discussion of equivalence relations and object
 equality, see the Object.equals
 specification. An equivalence relation partitions the values it
 operates over into sets called equivalence classes.  All the
 members of the equivalence class are equal to each other under the
 relation. An equivalence class may contain only a single member. At
 least for some purposes, all the members of an equivalence class
 are substitutable for each other.  In particular, in a numeric
 expression equivalent values can be substituted for one
 another without changing the result of the expression, meaning
 changing the equivalence class of the result of the expression.
 
Notably, the built-in == operation on floating-point
 values is not an equivalence relation. Despite not
 defining an equivalence relation, the semantics of the IEEE 754
 == operator were deliberately designed to meet other needs
 of numerical computation. There are two exceptions where the
 properties of an equivalence relation are not satisfied by == on floating-point values:
 
- If v1andv2are both NaN, thenv1 == v2has the valuefalse. Therefore, for two NaN arguments the reflexive property of an equivalence relation is not satisfied by the==operator.
- If v1represents+0.0whilev2represents-0.0, or vice versa, thenv1 == v2has the valuetrueeven though+0.0and-0.0are distinguishable under various floating-point operations. For example,1.0/+0.0evaluates to positive infinity while1.0/-0.0evaluates to negative infinity and positive infinity and negative infinity are neither equal to each other nor equivalent to each other. Thus, while a signed zero input most commonly determines the sign of a zero result, because of dividing by zero,+0.0and-0.0may not be substituted for each other in general. The sign of a zero input also has a non-substitutable effect on the result of some math library methods.
For ordered comparisons using the built-in comparison operators
 (<, <=, etc.), NaN values have another anomalous
 situation: a NaN is neither less than, nor greater than, nor equal
 to any value, including itself. This means the trichotomy of
 comparison does not hold.
 
To provide the appropriate semantics for equals and
 compareTo methods, those methods cannot simply be wrappers
 around == or ordered comparison operations. Instead, equals defines NaN arguments to be equal to each
 other and defines +0.0 to not be equal to -0.0, restoring reflexivity. For comparisons, compareTo defines a total order where -0.0 is less than +0.0 and where a NaN is equal to itself
 and considered greater than positive infinity.
 
The operational semantics of equals and compareTo are expressed in terms of bit-wise converting the floating-point values to integral values.
 
The natural ordering implemented by compareTo is consistent with equals. That
 is, two objects are reported as equal by equals if and only
 if compareTo on those objects returns zero.
 
The adjusted behaviors defined for equals and compareTo allow instances of wrapper classes to work properly with
 conventional data structures. For example, defining NaN
 values to be equals to one another allows NaN to be used as
 an element of a HashSet or as the key of
 a HashMap. Similarly, defining compareTo as a total ordering, including +0.0, -0.0, and NaN, allows instances of wrapper classes to be used as
 elements of a SortedSet or as keys of a
 SortedMap.
Summary
| Constants | |
|---|---|
| int | BYTESThe number of bytes used to represent a  | 
| int | MAX_EXPONENTMaximum exponent a finite  | 
| double | MAX_VALUEA constant holding the largest positive finite value of type
  | 
| int | MIN_EXPONENTMinimum exponent a normalized  | 
| double | MIN_NORMALA constant holding the smallest positive normal value of type
  | 
| double | MIN_VALUEA constant holding the smallest positive nonzero value of type
  | 
| double | NEGATIVE_INFINITYA constant holding the negative infinity of type
  | 
| double | NaNA constant holding a Not-a-Number (NaN) value of type
  | 
| double | POSITIVE_INFINITYA constant holding the positive infinity of type
  | 
| int | PRECISIONThe number of bits in the significand of a  | 
| int | SIZEThe number of bits used to represent a  | 
| Fields | |
|---|---|
| 
    public
    static
    final
    Class<Double> | TYPEThe  | 
| Public constructors | |
|---|---|
| 
      Double(double value)
      
      This constructor is deprecated.
    It is rarely appropriate to use this constructor. The static factory
  | |
| 
      Double(String s)
      
      This constructor is deprecated.
    It is rarely appropriate to use this constructor.
 Use  | |
| Public methods | |
|---|---|
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        byte | 
      byteValue()
      Returns the value of this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(double d1, double d2)
      Compares the two specified  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        int | 
      compareTo(Double anotherDouble)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        long | 
      doubleToLongBits(double value)
      Returns a representation of the specified floating-point value according to the IEEE 754 floating-point "double format" bit layout. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        long | 
      doubleToRawLongBits(double value)
      Returns a representation of the specified floating-point value according to the IEEE 754 floating-point "double format" bit layout, preserving Not-a-Number (NaN) values. | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        double | 
      doubleValue()
      Returns the  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(Object obj)
      Compares this object against the specified object. | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        float | 
      floatValue()
      Returns the value of this  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode()
      Returns a hash code for this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(double value)
      Returns a hash code for a  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        int | 
      intValue()
      Returns the value of this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      isFinite(double d)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      isInfinite()
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      isInfinite(double v)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      isNaN(double v)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      isNaN()
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double | 
      longBitsToDouble(long bits)
      Returns the  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        long | 
      longValue()
      Returns the value of this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double | 
      max(double a, double b)
      Returns the greater of two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double | 
      min(double a, double b)
      Returns the smaller of two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double | 
      parseDouble(String s)
      Returns a new  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        short | 
      shortValue()
      Returns the value of this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double | 
      sum(double a, double b)
      Adds two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toHexString(double d)
      Returns a hexadecimal string representation of the
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(double d)
      Returns a string representation of the  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        String | 
      toString()
      Returns a string representation of this  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Double | 
      valueOf(String s)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Double | 
      valueOf(double d)
      Returns a  | 
| Inherited methods | |
|---|---|
Constants
BYTES
public static final int BYTES
The number of bytes used to represent a double value.
Constant Value: 8 (0x00000008)
MAX_EXPONENT
public static final int MAX_EXPONENT
Maximum exponent a finite double variable may have.
 It is equal to the value returned by
 Math.getExponent(Double.MAX_VALUE).
Constant Value: 1023 (0x000003ff)
MAX_VALUE
public static final double MAX_VALUE
A constant holding the largest positive finite value of type
 double,
 (2-2-52)·21023.  It is equal to
 the hexadecimal floating-point literal
 0x1.fffffffffffffP+1023 and also equal to
 Double.longBitsToDouble(0x7fefffffffffffffL).
Constant Value: 1.7976931348623157E308
MIN_EXPONENT
public static final int MIN_EXPONENT
Minimum exponent a normalized double variable may
 have.  It is equal to the value returned by
 Math.getExponent(Double.MIN_NORMAL).
Constant Value: -1022 (0xfffffc02)
MIN_NORMAL
public static final double MIN_NORMAL
A constant holding the smallest positive normal value of type
 double, 2-1022.  It is equal to the
 hexadecimal floating-point literal 0x1.0p-1022 and also
 equal to Double.longBitsToDouble(0x0010000000000000L).
Constant Value: 2.2250738585072014E-308
MIN_VALUE
public static final double MIN_VALUE
A constant holding the smallest positive nonzero value of type
 double, 2-1074. It is equal to the
 hexadecimal floating-point literal
 0x0.0000000000001P-1022 and also equal to
 Double.longBitsToDouble(0x1L).
Constant Value: 4.9E-324
NEGATIVE_INFINITY
public static final double NEGATIVE_INFINITY
A constant holding the negative infinity of type
 double. It is equal to the value returned by
 Double.longBitsToDouble(0xfff0000000000000L).
Constant Value: -Infinity
NaN
public static final double NaN
A constant holding a Not-a-Number (NaN) value of type
 double. It is equivalent to the value returned by
 Double.longBitsToDouble(0x7ff8000000000000L).
Constant Value: NaN
POSITIVE_INFINITY
public static final double POSITIVE_INFINITY
A constant holding the positive infinity of type
 double. It is equal to the value returned by
 Double.longBitsToDouble(0x7ff0000000000000L).
Constant Value: Infinity
PRECISION
public static final int PRECISION
The number of bits in the significand of a double value.
 This is the parameter N in section {@jls 4.2.3} of
 The Java Language Specification.
Constant Value: 53 (0x00000035)
SIZE
public static final int SIZE
The number of bits used to represent a double value.
Constant Value: 64 (0x00000040)
Fields
TYPE
public static final Class<Double> TYPE
The Class instance representing the primitive type
 double.
Public constructors
Double
public Double (double value)
      This constructor is deprecated.
    It is rarely appropriate to use this constructor. The static factory
 valueOf(double) is generally a better choice, as it is
 likely to yield significantly better space and time performance.
  
Constructs a newly allocated Double object that
 represents the primitive double argument.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| value | double: the value to be represented by theDouble. | 
Double
public Double (String s)
      This constructor is deprecated.
    It is rarely appropriate to use this constructor.
 Use parseDouble(java.lang.String) to convert a string to a
 double primitive, or use valueOf(java.lang.String)
 to convert a string to a Double object.
  
Constructs a newly allocated Double object that
 represents the floating-point value of type double
 represented by the string. The string is converted to a
 double value as if by the valueOf method.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| s | String: a string to be converted to aDouble. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NumberFormatException | if the string does not contain a parsable number. | 
Public methods
byteValue
public byte byteValue ()
Returns the value of this Double as a byte
 after a narrowing primitive conversion.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| byte | the doublevalue represented by this object
          converted to typebyte | 
compare
public static int compare (double d1, 
                double d2)Compares the two specified double values. The sign
 of the integer value returned is the same as that of the
 integer that would be returned by the call:
 
    new Double(d1).compareTo(new Double(d2))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| d1 | double: the firstdoubleto compare | 
| d2 | double: the seconddoubleto compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0ifd1is
          numerically equal tod2; a value less than0ifd1is numerically less thand2; and a value greater than0ifd1is numerically greater thand2. | 
compareTo
public int compareTo (Double anotherDouble)
Compares two Double objects numerically.
 This method imposes a total order on Double objects
 with two differences compared to the incomplete order defined by
 the Java language numerical comparison operators (<, <=,
 ==, >=, >) on double values.
 
-  A NaN is unordered with respect to other
          values and unequal to itself under the comparison
          operators.  This method chooses to define Double.NaNto be equal to itself and greater than all otherdoublevalues (includingDouble.POSITIVE_INFINITY).
-  Positive zero and negative zero compare equal
      numerically, but are distinct and distinguishable values.
      This method chooses to define positive zero (+0.0d), to be greater than negative zero (-0.0d).
Double
 objects imposed by this method is consistent with
 equals; see this
 discussion for details of floating-point comparison and
 ordering.
    
    | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| anotherDouble | Double: theDoubleto be compared. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0ifanotherDoubleis
          numerically equal to thisDouble; a value
          less than0if thisDoubleis numerically less thananotherDouble;
          and a value greater than0if thisDoubleis numerically greater thananotherDouble. | 
doubleToLongBits
public static long doubleToLongBits (double value)
Returns a representation of the specified floating-point value according to the IEEE 754 floating-point "double format" bit layout.
Bit 63 (the bit that is selected by the mask
 0x8000000000000000L) represents the sign of the
 floating-point number. Bits
 62-52 (the bits that are selected by the mask
 0x7ff0000000000000L) represent the exponent. Bits 51-0
 (the bits that are selected by the mask
 0x000fffffffffffffL) represent the significand
 (sometimes called the mantissa) of the floating-point number.
 
If the argument is positive infinity, the result is
 0x7ff0000000000000L.
 
If the argument is negative infinity, the result is
 0xfff0000000000000L.
 
If the argument is NaN, the result is
 0x7ff8000000000000L.
 
In all cases, the result is a long integer that, when
 given to the longBitsToDouble(long) method, will produce a
 floating-point value the same as the argument to
 doubleToLongBits (except all NaN values are
 collapsed to a single "canonical" NaN value).
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| value | double: adoubleprecision floating-point number. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long | the bits that represent the floating-point number. | 
doubleToRawLongBits
public static long doubleToRawLongBits (double value)
Returns a representation of the specified floating-point value according to the IEEE 754 floating-point "double format" bit layout, preserving Not-a-Number (NaN) values.
Bit 63 (the bit that is selected by the mask
 0x8000000000000000L) represents the sign of the
 floating-point number. Bits
 62-52 (the bits that are selected by the mask
 0x7ff0000000000000L) represent the exponent. Bits 51-0
 (the bits that are selected by the mask
 0x000fffffffffffffL) represent the significand
 (sometimes called the mantissa) of the floating-point number.
 
If the argument is positive infinity, the result is
 0x7ff0000000000000L.
 
If the argument is negative infinity, the result is
 0xfff0000000000000L.
 
If the argument is NaN, the result is the long
 integer representing the actual NaN value.  Unlike the
 doubleToLongBits method,
 doubleToRawLongBits does not collapse all the bit
 patterns encoding a NaN to a single "canonical" NaN
 value.
 
In all cases, the result is a long integer that,
 when given to the longBitsToDouble(long) method, will
 produce a floating-point value the same as the argument to
 doubleToRawLongBits.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| value | double: adoubleprecision floating-point number. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long | the bits that represent the floating-point number. | 
doubleValue
public double doubleValue ()
Returns the double value of this Double object.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the doublevalue represented by this object | 
equals
public boolean equals (Object obj)
Compares this object against the specified object.  The result
 is true if and only if the argument is not
 null and is a Double object that
 represents a double that has the same value as the
 double represented by this object. For this
 purpose, two double values are considered to be
 the same if and only if the method doubleToLongBits(double) returns the identical
 long value when applied to each.
API Note:
- This method is defined in terms of doubleToLongBits(double)rather than the==operator ondoublevalues since the==operator does not define an equivalence relation and to satisfy the equals contract an equivalence relation must be implemented; see this discussion for details of floating-point equality and equivalence.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| obj | Object: the reference object with which to compare. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif this object is the same as the obj
          argument;falseotherwise. | 
See also:
floatValue
public float floatValue ()
Returns the value of this Double as a float
 after a narrowing primitive conversion.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| float | the doublevalue represented by this object
          converted to typefloat | 
hashCode
public int hashCode ()
Returns a hash code for this Double object. The
 result is the exclusive OR of the two halves of the
 long integer bit representation, exactly as
 produced by the method doubleToLongBits(double), of
 the primitive double value represented by this
 Double object. That is, the hash code is the value
 of the expression:
 
  (int)(v^(v>>>32))
 
 where v is defined by:
 
  long v = Double.doubleToLongBits(this.doubleValue());
 
    | Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a hash codevalue for this object. | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (double value)
Returns a hash code for a double value; compatible with
 Double.hashCode().
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| value | double: the value to hash | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a hash code value for a doublevalue. | 
intValue
public int intValue ()
Returns the value of this Double as an int
 after a narrowing primitive conversion.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the doublevalue represented by this object
          converted to typeint | 
isFinite
public static boolean isFinite (double d)
Returns true if the argument is a finite floating-point
 value; returns false otherwise (for NaN and infinity
 arguments).
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| d | double: thedoublevalue to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the argument is a finite
 floating-point value,falseotherwise. | 
isInfinite
public boolean isInfinite ()
Returns true if this Double value is
 infinitely large in magnitude, false otherwise.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the value represented by this object is
          positive infinity or negative infinity;falseotherwise. | 
isInfinite
public static boolean isInfinite (double v)
Returns true if the specified number is infinitely
 large in magnitude, false otherwise.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| v | double: the value to be tested. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the value of the argument is positive
          infinity or negative infinity;falseotherwise. | 
isNaN
public static boolean isNaN (double v)
Returns true if the specified number is a
 Not-a-Number (NaN) value, false otherwise.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| v | double: the value to be tested. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the value of the argument is NaN;falseotherwise. | 
isNaN
public boolean isNaN ()
Returns true if this Double value is
 a Not-a-Number (NaN), false otherwise.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the value represented by this object is
          NaN;falseotherwise. | 
longBitsToDouble
public static double longBitsToDouble (long bits)
Returns the double value corresponding to a given
 bit representation.
 The argument is considered to be a representation of a
 floating-point value according to the IEEE 754 floating-point
 "double format" bit layout.
 
If the argument is 0x7ff0000000000000L, the result
 is positive infinity.
 
If the argument is 0xfff0000000000000L, the result
 is negative infinity.
 
If the argument is any value in the range
 0x7ff0000000000001L through
 0x7fffffffffffffffL or in the range
 0xfff0000000000001L through
 0xffffffffffffffffL, the result is a NaN.  No IEEE
 754 floating-point operation provided by Java can distinguish
 between two NaN values of the same type with different bit
 patterns.  Distinct values of NaN are only distinguishable by
 use of the Double.doubleToRawLongBits method.
 
In all other cases, let s, e, and m be three values that can be computed from the argument:
Then the floating-point result equals the value of the mathematical expression s·m·2e-1075.int s = ((bits >> 63) == 0) ? 1 : -1; int e = (int)((bits >> 52) & 0x7ffL); long m = (e == 0) ? (bits & 0xfffffffffffffL) << 1 : (bits & 0xfffffffffffffL) | 0x10000000000000L;
Note that this method may not be able to return a
 double NaN with exactly same bit pattern as the
 long argument.  IEEE 754 distinguishes between two
 kinds of NaNs, quiet NaNs and signaling NaNs.  The
 differences between the two kinds of NaN are generally not
 visible in Java.  Arithmetic operations on signaling NaNs turn
 them into quiet NaNs with a different, but often similar, bit
 pattern.  However, on some processors merely copying a
 signaling NaN also performs that conversion.  In particular,
 copying a signaling NaN to return it to the calling method
 may perform this conversion.  So longBitsToDouble
 may not be able to return a double with a
 signaling NaN bit pattern.  Consequently, for some
 long values,
 doubleToRawLongBits(longBitsToDouble(start)) may
 not equal start.  Moreover, which
 particular bit patterns represent signaling NaNs is platform
 dependent; although all NaN bit patterns, quiet or signaling,
 must be in the NaN range identified above.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| bits | long: anylonginteger. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the doublefloating-point value with the same
          bit pattern. | 
longValue
public long longValue ()
Returns the value of this Double as a long
 after a narrowing primitive conversion.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long | the doublevalue represented by this object
          converted to typelong | 
max
public static double max (double a, 
                double b)Returns the greater of two double values
 as if by calling Math.max.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first operand | 
| b | double: the second operand | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the greater of aandb | 
See also:
min
public static double min (double a, 
                double b)Returns the smaller of two double values
 as if by calling Math.min.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first operand | 
| b | double: the second operand | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the smaller of aandb. | 
See also:
parseDouble
public static double parseDouble (String s)
Returns a new double initialized to the value
 represented by the specified String, as performed
 by the valueOf method of class
 Double.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| s | String: the string to be parsed. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the doublevalue represented by the string
         argument. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the string is null | 
| NumberFormatException | if the string does not contain
         a parsable double. | 
See also:
shortValue
public short shortValue ()
Returns the value of this Double as a short
 after a narrowing primitive conversion.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| short | the doublevalue represented by this object
          converted to typeshort | 
sum
public static double sum (double a, 
                double b)Adds two double values together as per the + operator.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first operand | 
| b | double: the second operand | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double | the sum of aandb | 
See also:
toHexString
public static String toHexString (double d)
Returns a hexadecimal string representation of the
 double argument. All characters mentioned below
 are ASCII characters.
 
- If the argument is NaN, the result is the string
     "NaN".
- Otherwise, the result is a string that represents the sign
 and magnitude of the argument. If the sign is negative, the
 first character of the result is '-' ('\u002D'); if the sign is positive, no sign character appears in the result. As for the magnitude m:- If m is infinity, it is represented by the string
 "Infinity"; thus, positive infinity produces the result"Infinity"and negative infinity produces the result"-Infinity".
- If m is zero, it is represented by the string
 "0x0.0p0"; thus, negative zero produces the result"-0x0.0p0"and positive zero produces the result"0x0.0p0".
- If m is a doublevalue with a normalized representation, substrings are used to represent the significand and exponent fields. The significand is represented by the characters"0x1."followed by a lowercase hexadecimal representation of the rest of the significand as a fraction. Trailing zeros in the hexadecimal representation are removed unless all the digits are zero, in which case a single zero is used. Next, the exponent is represented by"p"followed by a decimal string of the unbiased exponent as if produced by a call toInteger.toStringon the exponent value.
- If m is a doublevalue with a subnormal representation, the significand is represented by the characters"0x0."followed by a hexadecimal representation of the rest of the significand as a fraction. Trailing zeros in the hexadecimal representation are removed. Next, the exponent is represented by"p-1022". Note that there must be at least one nonzero digit in a subnormal significand.
 
- If m is infinity, it is represented by the string
 
| Floating-point Value | Hexadecimal String | 
|---|---|
| 1.0 | 0x1.0p0 | 
| -1.0 | -0x1.0p0 | 
| 2.0 | 0x1.0p1 | 
| 3.0 | 0x1.8p1 | 
| 0.5 | 0x1.0p-1 | 
| 0.25 | 0x1.0p-2 | 
| Double.MAX_VALUE | 0x1.fffffffffffffp1023 | 
| Minimum Normal Value | 0x1.0p-1022 | 
| Maximum Subnormal Value | 0x0.fffffffffffffp-1022 | 
| Double.MIN_VALUE | 0x0.0000000000001p-1022 | 
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| d | double: thedoubleto be converted. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a hex string representation of the argument. | 
toString
public static String toString (double d)
Returns a string representation of the double
 argument. All characters mentioned below are ASCII characters.
 
- If the argument is NaN, the result is the string
     "NaN".
- Otherwise, the result is a string that represents the sign and
 magnitude (absolute value) of the argument. If the sign is negative,
 the first character of the result is '-' ('\u002D'); if the sign is positive, no sign character appears in the result. As for the magnitude m:- If m is infinity, it is represented by the characters
 "Infinity"; thus, positive infinity produces the result"Infinity"and negative infinity produces the result"-Infinity".
- If m is zero, it is represented by the characters
 "0.0"; thus, negative zero produces the result"-0.0"and positive zero produces the result"0.0".
- If m is greater than or equal to 10-3 but less
 than 107, then it is represented as the integer part of
 m, in decimal form with no leading zeroes, followed by
 '.' ('\u002E'), followed by one or more decimal digits representing the fractional part of m.
- If m is less than 10-3 or greater than or
 equal to 107, then it is represented in so-called
 "computerized scientific notation." Let n be the unique
 integer such that 10n ≤ m <
 10n+1; then let a be the
 mathematically exact quotient of m and
 10n so that 1 ≤ a < 10. The
 magnitude is then represented as the integer part of a,
 as a single decimal digit, followed by '.' ('\u002E'), followed by decimal digits representing the fractional part of a, followed by the letter 'E' ('\u0045'), followed by a representation of n as a decimal integer, as produced by the methodInteger.toString(int).
 
- If m is infinity, it is represented by the characters
 
double. That is, suppose that
 x is the exact mathematical value represented by the decimal
 representation produced by this method for a finite nonzero argument
 d. Then d must be the double value nearest
 to x; or if two double values are equally close
 to x, then d must be one of them and the least
 significant bit of the significand of d must be 0.
 To create localized string representations of a floating-point
 value, use subclasses of NumberFormat.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| d | double: thedoubleto be converted. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of the argument. | 
toString
public String toString ()
Returns a string representation of this Double object.
 The primitive double value represented by this
 object is converted to a string exactly as if by the method
 toString of one argument.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a Stringrepresentation of this object. | 
See also:
valueOf
public static Double valueOf (String s)
Returns a Double object holding the
 double value represented by the argument string
 s.
 
If s is null, then a
 NullPointerException is thrown.
 
Leading and trailing whitespace characters in s
 are ignored.  Whitespace is removed as if by the String.trim() method; that is, both ASCII space and control
 characters are removed. The rest of s should
 constitute a FloatValue as described by the lexical
 syntax rules:
 
where Sign, FloatingPointLiteral, HexNumeral, HexDigits, SignedInteger and FloatTypeSuffix are as defined in the lexical structure sections of The Java Language Specification, except that underscores are not accepted between digits. If
- FloatValue:
- Signopt
NaN- Signopt
Infinity- Signopt FloatingPointLiteral
- Signopt HexFloatingPointLiteral
- SignedInteger
- HexFloatingPointLiteral:
- HexSignificand BinaryExponent FloatTypeSuffixopt
- HexSignificand:
- HexNumeral
- HexNumeral
.
0xHexDigitsopt.HexDigits
0XHexDigitsopt.HexDigits
- BinaryExponent:
- BinaryExponentIndicator SignedInteger
- BinaryExponentIndicator:
p
P
s does not have the form of
 a FloatValue, then a NumberFormatException
 is thrown. Otherwise, s is regarded as
 representing an exact decimal value in the usual
 "computerized scientific notation" or as an exact
 hexadecimal value; this exact numerical value is then
 conceptually converted to an "infinitely precise"
 binary value that is then rounded to type double
 by the usual round-to-nearest rule of IEEE 754 floating-point
 arithmetic, which includes preserving the sign of a zero
 value.
 Note that the round-to-nearest rule also implies overflow and
 underflow behaviour; if the exact value of s is large
 enough in magnitude (greater than or equal to (MAX_VALUE + ulp(MAX_VALUE)/2),
 rounding to double will result in an infinity and if the
 exact value of s is small enough in magnitude (less
 than or equal to MIN_VALUE/2), rounding to float will
 result in a zero.
 Finally, after rounding a Double object representing
 this double value is returned.
  To interpret localized string representations of a
 floating-point value, use subclasses of NumberFormat.
 
Note that trailing format specifiers, specifiers that
 determine the type of a floating-point literal
 (1.0f is a float value;
 1.0d is a double value), do
 not influence the results of this method.  In other
 words, the numerical value of the input string is converted
 directly to the target floating-point type.  The two-step
 sequence of conversions, string to float followed
 by float to double, is not
 equivalent to converting a string directly to
 double. For example, the float
 literal 0.1f is equal to the double
 value 0.10000000149011612; the float
 literal 0.1f represents a different numerical
 value than the double literal
 0.1. (The numerical value 0.1 cannot be exactly
 represented in a binary floating-point number.)
 
To avoid calling this method on an invalid string and having
 a NumberFormatException be thrown, the regular
 expression below can be used to screen the input string:
 
final String Digits     = "(\\p{Digit}+)";
  final String HexDigits  = "(\\p{XDigit}+)";
  // an exponent is 'e' or 'E' followed by an optionally
  // signed decimal integer.
  final String Exp        = "[eE][+-]?"+Digits;
  final String fpRegex    =
      ("[\\x00-\\x20]*"+  // Optional leading "whitespace"
       "[+-]?(" + // Optional sign character
       "NaN|" +           // "NaN" string
       "Infinity|" +      // "Infinity" string
       // A decimal floating-point string representing a finite positive
       // number without a leading sign has at most five basic pieces:
       // Digits . Digits ExponentPart FloatTypeSuffix
       //
       // Since this method allows integer-only strings as input
       // in addition to strings of floating-point literals, the
       // two sub-patterns below are simplifications of the grammar
       // productions from section 3.10.2 of
       // The Java Language Specification.
       // Digits ._opt Digits_opt ExponentPart_opt FloatTypeSuffix_opt
       "((("+Digits+"(\\.)?("+Digits+"?)("+Exp+")?)|"+
       // . Digits ExponentPart_opt FloatTypeSuffix_opt
       "(\\.("+Digits+")("+Exp+")?)|"+
       // Hexadecimal strings
       "((" +
        // 0[xX] HexDigits ._opt BinaryExponent FloatTypeSuffix_opt
        "(0[xX]" + HexDigits + "(\\.)?)|" +
        // 0[xX] HexDigits_opt . HexDigits BinaryExponent FloatTypeSuffix_opt
        "(0[xX]" + HexDigits + "?(\\.)" + HexDigits + ")" +
        ")[pP][+-]?" + Digits + "))" +
       "[fFdD]?))" +
       "[\\x00-\\x20]*");// Optional trailing "whitespace"
  if (Pattern.matches(fpRegex, myString))
      Double.valueOf(myString); // Will not throw NumberFormatException
  else {
      // Perform suitable alternative action
  }
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| s | String: the string to be parsed. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Double | a Doubleobject holding the value
             represented by theStringargument. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NumberFormatException | if the string does not contain a parsable number. | 
valueOf
public static Double valueOf (double d)
Returns a Double instance representing the specified
 double value.
 If a new Double instance is not required, this method
 should generally be used in preference to the constructor
 Double(double), as this method is likely to yield
 significantly better space and time performance by caching
 frequently requested values.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| d | double: a double value. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Double | a Doubleinstance representingd. | 
