Your intuition quite rightly tells you that there can be no more information content in one than the other, because they both have 32 bits. But that doesn't mean we can't use those bits to represent different values.
Suppose I invent two new datatypes, uint4
and foo4
. uint4
uses 4 bits to represent an integer, in the standard binary representation, so we have
bits value
0000 0
0001 1
0010 2
...
1111 15
But foo4
uses 4 bits to represent these values:
bits value
0000 0
0001 42
0010 -97
0011 1
...
1110 pi
1111 e
Now foo4
has a much wider range of values than uint4
, despite having the same number of bits! How? Because there are some uint4
values that can't be represented by foo4
, so those 'slots' in the bit mapping are available for other values.
It is the same for int
and float
- they can both store values from a set of 232 values, just different sets of 232 values.
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