 
                            The Java language allows platforms to use available floating-point hardware that can provide extended floating-point support with exponents that contain more bits than the standard Java primitive type double (in the absence of the strictfp modifier). Consequently, these platforms can represent a superset of the values that can be represented by the standard floating-point types. Floating-point computations on such platforms can produce different results than would be obtained if the floating-point computations were restricted to the standard representations of float and double. According to the JLS, ����������€š�š�š�š�š§15�����������‚�š�š�š�š�š§15.4, "FP-strict Expressions" [JLS 2005]:
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Magnitude loss would also occur if the value were stored to memory ����������‚�š�š�š�š����������€š�š�š�š���������€š�š�š�������€š�š�����€š���€œ �����������€š�š�š�š�š�����������‚�š�š�š�š����������‚�š�š�š��������‚�š�š������‚�š����‚��“ for example, to a field of type float. 
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| Ensuring the Accuracy of Floating-Point Numbers | |
| [JLS 2005] | ����������€š�š�š�š�š§15�����������‚�š�š�š�š�š§15.4, FP-strict Expressions | 
| [JPL 2006] | 9.1.3, Strict and Non-Strict Floating-Point Arithmetic | 
| Making Deep Copies of Objects, Using strictfp, and Optimizing String Performance | 
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