Number literals include exact-value (integer and
        DECIMAL) literals and
        approximate-value (floating-point) literals.
      
        Integers are represented as a sequence of digits. Numbers may
        include . as a decimal separator. Numbers may
        be preceded by - or + to
        indicate a negative or positive value, respectively. Numbers
        represented in scientific notation with a mantissa and exponent
        are approximate-value numbers.
      
        Exact-value numeric literals have an integer part or fractional
        part, or both. They may be signed. Examples:
        1, .2,
        3.4, -5,
        -6.78, +9.10.
      
        Approximate-value numeric literals are represented in scientific
        notation with a mantissa and exponent. Either or both parts may
        be signed. Examples: 1.2E3,
        1.2E-3, -1.2E3,
        -1.2E-3.
      
        Two numbers that look similar may be treated differently. For
        example, 2.34 is an exact-value (fixed-point)
        number, whereas 2.34E0 is an
        approximate-value (floating-point) number.
      
        The DECIMAL data type is a
        fixed-point type and calculations are exact. In MySQL, the
        DECIMAL type has several
        synonyms: NUMERIC,
        DEC,
        FIXED. The integer types also are
        exact-value types. For more information about exact-value
        calculations, see Section 14.24, “Precision Math”.
      
        The FLOAT and
        DOUBLE data types are
        floating-point types and calculations are approximate. In MySQL,
        types that are synonymous with
        FLOAT or
        DOUBLE are
        DOUBLE PRECISION and
        REAL.
      
An integer may be used in floating-point context; it is interpreted as the equivalent floating-point number.