printf("%.6f", myFloat);
//get a float from user
//print float value to console
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
//define a float variable
float a;
//print the prompt
printf("Please enter a float number: ");
//Actually getting the number
scanf("%f", &a);
printf("You have entered %f", a);
}
printf("%.6f", myFloat);
I want to print a float value which has 2 integer digits and 6 decimal digits after the comma. If I just use printf("%f", myFloat) I'm getting a truncated value.
I don't know if this always happens in C, or it's just because I'm using C for microcontrollers (CCS to be exact), but at the reference it tells that %f get just that: a truncated float.
If my float is 44.556677, I'm printing out "44.55", only the first two decimal digits.