// test_output! [["1.20e+2","1.22e+2","1.22e+2","1.24e+2","1.24e+2"],["1.21e+0","1.22e+0","1.23e+0","1.24e+0","1.25e+0"]] // This is wrong. There's some inconsistent banker's rounding going on. // It appears to be inherent to rust's {:.*e} formatting - a technical oversight? // Or maybe it has to do with parsing the source string into a number imprecisely? export default function () { return [ [ // Banker's rounding? (120.5).toExponential(2), (121.5).toExponential(2), // 1.22e+2 (122.5).toExponential(2), // 1.22e+2 *again* (123.5).toExponential(2), // 1.24e+2 (124.5).toExponential(2), // 1.24e+2 *again* ], [ // Not banker's rounding?? (1.205).toExponential(2), (1.215).toExponential(2), // 1.22e+0 (1.225).toExponential(2), // 1.23e+0 (*not* repeated) (1.235).toExponential(2), // 1.24e+0 (1.245).toExponential(2), // 1.25e+0 (*not* repeated) ], ]; }