setFloat32 abstract method Null safety
Sets the four bytes starting at the specified byteOffset
in this
object to the IEEE 754 single-precision binary floating-point
(binary32) representation of the specified value
.
Note that this method can lose precision. The input value
is
a 64-bit floating point value, which will be converted to 32-bit
floating point value by IEEE 754 rounding rules before it is stored.
If value
cannot be represented exactly as a binary32, it will be
converted to the nearest binary32 value. If two binary32 values are
equally close, the one whose least significant bit is zero will be used.
Note that finite (but large) values can be converted to infinity, and
small non-zero values can be converted to zero.
The byteOffset
must be non-negative, and
byteOffset + 4
must be less than or equal to the length of this object.
Implementation
void setFloat32(int byteOffset, double value, [Endian endian = Endian.big]);