I am wondering if the max float represented in IEEE 754 is:
(1.11111111111111111111111)_b*2^[(11111111)_b-127]
Here _b means binary representation. But that value is 3.403201383*10^38, which is different from 3.402823669*10^38, which is (1.0)_b*2^[(11111111)_b-127] and given by for example c++ <limits>. Isn't
(1.11111111111111111111111)_b*2^[(11111111)_b-127] representable and larger in the framework?
Does anybody know why?
Thank you.
The exponent 11111111b is reserved for infinities and NaNs, so your number cannot be represented.
The greatest value that can be represented in single precision, approximately 3.4028235×1038, is actually 1.11111111111111111111111b×211111110b-127.
See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-precision_floating-point_format
Being the "m" the mantissa and the "e" the exponent, the answer is:

In your case, if the number of bits on IEEE 754 are:
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