> Idk though, is this a real concern with traditional finance? Zimbabwe had their huge bills, but I assume the small ones were unused. Just like you round US cents, you could probably round their currency at some cutoff. If you were processing Ether outside the blockchain, you'd probably round somewhere too.
Yeah... I started reading this article and was waiting for the crypto angle, because in normal finance I don't see how it could plausibly matter (disclaimer: not my domain).
The only reason I could imagine needing to track this level of precision on fractional units of currency was the sort of financial trickery that is enabled by cryptocurrencies.
Yes, we actually held out on the digital currency angle.
What tipped the scales, was realizing that this applied also in normal finance, especially exchanges (not crypto) that operate with high precision: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37573939
Even in cryptocurrency, I feel like the level of precision is mainly aspirational + cuz they can. Who cares about 1 wei in the context of a transaction that costs around 100 trillion wei on its own? The smallest unit of ether I've ever seen in any kind of UI is 1 gwei (1 billion wei).
Forgot to also add, cause various parts of a cryptocurrency ecosystem are much harder to change than traditional finance. So I can see why they throw in a ton of 0s and use 256-bit ints just in case.
Yeah... I started reading this article and was waiting for the crypto angle, because in normal finance I don't see how it could plausibly matter (disclaimer: not my domain).
The only reason I could imagine needing to track this level of precision on fractional units of currency was the sort of financial trickery that is enabled by cryptocurrencies.