denormalsarezero
DenormalsAreZero refers to a mode in floating-point computation in which denormal (subnormal) numbers are treated as zero. In IEEE 754, denormals fill the subnormal range between zero and the smallest normal number, allowing gradual underflow and extending the range of representable small values. Some hardware implementations provide a control flag or mode often called Denormals Are Zero (DAZ); in other contexts a related setting called Flush-To-Zero (FTZ) can yield similar effects. When DAZ is enabled, denormal inputs to floating-point operations are treated as zero, and in some configurations the processor avoids producing subnormal results by underflowing to zero.
The exact behavior of denormalsAreZero is architecture-specific. In x86 processors, the MXCSR control and status register
Implications include a trade-off between performance and numerical precision. Enabling DAZ/FTZ can improve throughput and reduce