### What it does
Checks for (in-)equality comparisons on floating-point
values (apart from zero), except in functions called `*eq*` (which probably
implement equality for a type involving floats).

### Why is this bad?
Floating point calculations are usually imprecise, so
asking if two values are *exactly* equal is asking for trouble. For a good
guide on what to do, see [the floating point
guide](http://www.floating-point-gui.de/errors/comparison).

### Example
```
let x = 1.2331f64;
let y = 1.2332f64;

if y == 1.23f64 { }
if y != x {} // where both are floats
```

Use instead:
```
let error_margin = f64::EPSILON; // Use an epsilon for comparison
// Or, if Rust <= 1.42, use `std::f64::EPSILON` constant instead.
// let error_margin = std::f64::EPSILON;
if (y - 1.23f64).abs() < error_margin { }
if (y - x).abs() > error_margin { }
```