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This is due to floating-point math (decimal places) are stored in a not-completely accurate way. You'll get the same problem in other coding languages.
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Basically, if you divide 1 by 9, you get 0.1111..., multiply by 9, you get 0.9999... which doesn't match 1.0, and it's the same sort of idea here. The computer doesn't store the number exactly, it stores the closest it can get, and normally you won't notice the difference, because it's so tiny.
In this case though, you've done several tiny inaccuracies on top of each other, that you won't see easily, so the end result is something like 1.60000000000001 or 1.599999999999 or something, which does not exactly equal 1.6, and anything displaying it will just round it... but internally, that tiny difference means it does not equal 1.6.
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Try something where you check a tiny range around expected numbers; alternatively, store it as integers, no decimal places, and divide it by 10.0 when displaying.