I think you’ve summarised the advantages quite well. You are however missing one point. The decimal
type is only more accurate at representing base 10 numbers (e.g. those used in currency/financial calculations). In general, the double
type is going to offer at least as great precision (someone correct me if I’m wrong) and definitely greater speed for arbitrary real numbers. The simple conclusion is: when considering which to use, always use double
unless you need the base 10
accuracy that decimal
offers.
Edit:
Regarding your additional question about the decrease in accuracy of floating-point numbers after operations, this is a slightly more subtle issue. Indeed, precision (I use the term interchangeably for accuracy here) will steadily decrease after each operation is performed. This is due to two reasons:
- the fact that certain numbers (most obviously decimals) can’t be truly represented in floating point form
- rounding errors occur, just as if you were doing the calculation by hand. It depends greatly on the context (how many operations you’re performing) whether these errors are significant enough to warrant much thought however.
In all cases, if you want to compare two floating-point numbers that should in theory be equivalent (but were arrived at using different calculations), you need to allow a certain degree of tolerance (how much varies, but is typically very small).
For a more detailed overview of the particular cases where errors in accuracies can be introduced, see the Accuracy section of the Wikipedia article. Finally, if you want a seriously in-depth (and mathematical) discussion of floating-point numbers/operations at machine level, try reading the oft-quoted article What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic.