Floating-point numbers sometimes cause confusion because they
          are approximate and not stored as exact values. A
          floating-point value as written in an SQL statement may not be
          the same as the value represented internally. Attempts to
          treat floating-point values as exact in comparisons may lead
          to problems. They are also subject to platform or
          implementation dependencies. The
          FLOAT and
          DOUBLE data types are subject
          to these issues. For DECIMAL
          columns, MySQL performs operations with a precision of 65
          decimal digits, which should solve most common inaccuracy
          problems.
        
          The following example uses
          DOUBLE to demonstrate how
          calculations that are done using floating-point operations are
          subject to floating-point error.
        
mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, d1 DOUBLE, d2 DOUBLE);
mysql> INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 101.40, 21.40), (1, -80.00, 0.00),
    -> (2, 0.00, 0.00), (2, -13.20, 0.00), (2, 59.60, 46.40),
    -> (2, 30.40, 30.40), (3, 37.00, 7.40), (3, -29.60, 0.00),
    -> (4, 60.00, 15.40), (4, -10.60, 0.00), (4, -34.00, 0.00),
    -> (5, 33.00, 0.00), (5, -25.80, 0.00), (5, 0.00, 7.20),
    -> (6, 0.00, 0.00), (6, -51.40, 0.00);
mysql> SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b
    -> FROM t1 GROUP BY i HAVING a <> b;
+------+-------+------+
| i    | a     | b    |
+------+-------+------+
|    1 |  21.4 | 21.4 |
|    2 |  76.8 | 76.8 |
|    3 |   7.4 |  7.4 |
|    4 |  15.4 | 15.4 |
|    5 |   7.2 |  7.2 |
|    6 | -51.4 |    0 |
+------+-------+------+
          The result is correct. Although the first five records look
          like they should not satisfy the comparison (the values of
          a and b do not appear to
          be different), they may do so because the difference between
          the numbers shows up around the tenth decimal or so, depending
          on factors such as computer architecture or the compiler
          version or optimization level. For example, different CPUs may
          evaluate floating-point numbers differently.
        
          If columns d1 and d2 had
          been defined as DECIMAL rather
          than DOUBLE, the result of the
          SELECT query would have
          contained only one row—the last one shown above.
        
The correct way to do floating-point number comparison is to first decide on an acceptable tolerance for differences between the numbers and then do the comparison against the tolerance value. For example, if we agree that floating-point numbers should be regarded the same if they are same within a precision of one in ten thousand (0.0001), the comparison should be written to find differences larger than the tolerance value:
mysql> SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b FROM t1
    -> GROUP BY i HAVING ABS(a - b) > 0.0001;
+------+-------+------+
| i    | a     | b    |
+------+-------+------+
|    6 | -51.4 |    0 |
+------+-------+------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)Conversely, to get rows where the numbers are the same, the test should find differences within the tolerance value:
mysql> SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b FROM t1
    -> GROUP BY i HAVING ABS(a - b) <= 0.0001;
+------+------+------+
| i    | a    | b    |
+------+------+------+
|    1 | 21.4 | 21.4 |
|    2 | 76.8 | 76.8 |
|    3 |  7.4 |  7.4 |
|    4 | 15.4 | 15.4 |
|    5 |  7.2 |  7.2 |
+------+------+------+
5 rows in set (0.03 sec)Floating-point values are subject to platform or implementation dependencies. Suppose that you execute the following statements:
CREATE TABLE t1(c1 FLOAT(53,0), c2 FLOAT(53,0));
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('1e+52','-1e+52');
SELECT * FROM t1;
          On some platforms, the SELECT statement
          returns inf and -inf. On
          others, it returns 0 and
          -0.
        
An implication of the preceding issues is that if you attempt to create a replica by dumping table contents with mysqldump on the source and reloading the dump file into the replica, tables containing floating-point columns might differ between the two hosts.