Test case:
NSLog(@"%f", M_PI);
NSLog(@"%@", [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f", M_PI]);
NSLog(@"%@", [NSNumber numberWithDouble:M_PI]);
Results:
3.141593
3.141593
3.141592653589793
Conclusions:
1) Printing via NSLog() or [NSString stringWithFormat] provide a very low precision...
2) Printing via [NSNumber numberWithDouble] provides a better precision...
I would have expected to get a result much closer to the original value: 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288 (as defined in math.h)
Any clues?
The first two lines round to 6 decimals because that's the default rounding length for printf
inherited from C.
The third line displays the data with the maximum useful precision - an IEEE 754 64bit floating-point number has slightly less than 16 decimal digits of precision, so all those digits of the literal in math.h
are pointless (perhaps they can be seen as future-proofing against a possible future redefinition in a format with more precision).
Maybe a bit late as of an answer but someone might stumble upon these problems:
You should use long double with a maximum formatting of 20 digits @.20Lg.
The long doubles are 80-bit floating points, so you will not get a better precision than that.
Be aware also that as of XCode 4.3.2 the constants are not in long double notation, even if the many digits suggest an uberlong double ;-)
NSLog(@"%.21g", M_PI);
// with cast because M_PI is not defined as long double
NSLog(@"%.21Lg", (long double)M_PI);
// with corrected long double representation (#.####L):
// v from here on overhead
NSLog(@"%.21Lg", 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288L);
// alternative for creating PI
NSLog(@"%.21Lg", asinl(1.0)*2.0);
// and a funny test case:
NSLog(@"%.21Lg", asinl(1.0)*2.0 - M_PI); // on second thought, not that funny: should be 0.0
the results are:
p[5528:f803] 3.141592653589793116 (actually 16 digits standard double precision)
p[5528:f803] 3.141592653589793116
p[5528:f803] 3.14159265358979323851
p[5528:f803] 3.14159265358979323851
p[5575:f803] 1.22514845490862001043e-16 (should have been 0.0)
Try this, this work for me
NSLog(@"%@",[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f",distance]);
NSLog(@"%@", [NSDecimalNumber numberWithDouble:M_PI]);
a little more precision