Compound Interest and Oscillation

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If we calculate compound interest, it will approach continuous interest as we compound more and more frequently. However, in the region of $3.0e10^7$, compound interest exceeds continuous interest. From that point, it begins to oscillate slightly above and slightly below the value of $P*e^{rt}$. How can we say the limit exists if we have these finite oscillations?

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The problem has nothing to do with compound interest calculations, but about how machines work.

Although numbers can become infinitely large and require more and more precision, computer memory is not infinite.

(Floating-point) numbers are not represented perfectly in computers or calculators, hence you get these kinds of oscillations for very large (or very small) numbers without it actually happening if you were to do this purely algebraically using pen and paper.