Marcel--
Many floating point numbers don't have an exact binary floating point representation. So after a few operations, it's normal to get odd digits a few places to the right.
For example, 1/3 doesn't have an exact decimal representation. If you truncate to 3 digits past the decimal, and subtract 1/3 three times from one, you'd also have an odd value:
1.000 - 0.333 = 0.667
0.667 - 0.333 = 0.334
0.334 - 0.333 = 0.001
--roboticus
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