nonintegers
Nonintegers are real numbers that are not integers. The integers form the set {..., -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, ...}, and every real number outside this set is a noninteger. This category includes rational nonintegers, such as 3/4 and -5/2, and irrational nonintegers, such as sqrt(2) and pi. Decimal representations help distinguish them: rational nonintegers may have finite decimals (like 0.5) or infinite repeating decimals (like 0.333...). Irrational nonintegers have nonrepeating, nonterminating decimals (like sqrt(2) ≈ 1.41421356...).
Note that whether a value is an integer or not is a matter of its numerical value,
Nonintegers are dense in the real numbers: between any two real numbers there exist infinitely many nonintegers.
In computing and numerical work, nonintegers are commonly represented as floating-point numbers, which store approximate non-integer