6
Firstly, IEEE is not a standard, it is an organisation (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers). The IEEE Standards Organisation is responsible for the standardisation activities of the IEEE. As such, there are many IEEE standards.There are two official IEEE standards covering 32-bit binary values:IEEE 754-1985 (single)IEEE 754-2008 (binary32)IEEE 754-2008 single-precision binary floating-point format: binary32The high-order bit always denotes the sign (0 for positive, 1 for negative).The next 8 bits denote the exponent. This can either be notated in twos-complement (-128 to +127) or 127-biased (0 to 255). IEEE 754-2008 (binary32) uses the 127-biased form.The low-order 23 bits denote the normalised mantissa. There's actually 24 bits in the mantissa but the high-order bit is always 1 and can therefore be implied rather than stored.The decimal precision that can be obtained from an IEEE 754-2008 (binary32) value is usually in the order of 6 to 9 digits of precision, depending on the implementation.
none, it uses denormalization.
Yu cound be any number in the interval [599500, 600500]. [Rounding halves to evens as per IEEE standard 754.]
10.25
It is 875.It can be 875 or 885. Using the round-half-to-even method, as required by IEEE Standard 754, both would be rounded to 880.
According to IEEE the 802STANDARD is used for LAN Standard.
IEEE 802.3z
1394
The exponent field for a float data type according to the IEEE-754 Standard is comprised of 8 bits, a whole number range of 0-255.
There is nothing to be compatible with. Wireless A (IEEE 802.11a) was the first standard of the IEEE 802.11 standard.
802.3 is the IEEE standard for Ethernet devices and data managment