This standard is a simplified version and a subset of the IEEE Std 1788TM-2015 for Interval Arithmetic and includes those operations and features of the latter that in the the editors' view are most commonly used in practice. IEEE Std 1788.1-2017 specifies interval arithmetic operations based on intervals whose endpoints are IEEE Std 754TM-2008 binary64 floating-point numbers and a decoration system for exception-free computations and propagation of properties of the computed results. A program built on top of an implementation of IEEE Std 1788.1-2017 should compile and run, and give identical output within round off, using an implementation of IEEE Std 1788-2015, or any superset of the former. Compared to IEEE Std 1788-2015, this standard aims to be minimalistic, yet to cover much of the functionality needed for interval computations. As such, it is more accessible and will be much easier to implement, and thus will speed up production of implementations.
- Standard Committee
- C/MSC - Microprocessor Standards Committee
- Status
- Active Standard
- PAR Approval
- 2015-02-16
- Board Approval
- 2017-12-06
- History
-
- Published:
- 2018-01-31
Working Group Details
- Society
- IEEE Computer Society
- Standard Committee
- C/MSC - Microprocessor Standards Committee
- Working Group
-
Interval Arithmetic - Working Group for Interval Arithmetic
- IEEE Program Manager
- Tom Thompson
Contact Tom Thompson - Working Group Chair
- Nathalie Revol
Other Activities From This Working Group
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Standards approved by the IEEE SA Standards Board that are within the 10-year lifecycle.
1788-2015
IEEE Standard for Interval Arithmetic
This standard specifies basic interval arithmetic (IA) operations selecting and following one of the commonly used mathematical interval models. This standard supports the IEEE 754 floating point formats of practical use in interval computations. Exception conditions are defined, and standard handling of these conditions is specified. Consistency with the interval model is tempered with practical considerations based on input from representatives of vendors, developers and maintainers of existing systems. The standard provides a layer between the hardware and the programming language levels. It does not mandate that any operations be implemented in hardware. It does not define any realization of the basic operations as functions in a programming language.
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