Explain that most floats are actually integers. This is a common confusion
for people using floor(), ceil() and modf().
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libmath.tex b/Doc/lib/libmath.tex
index 7f25eba..e52f8f9 100644
--- a/Doc/lib/libmath.tex
+++ b/Doc/lib/libmath.tex
@@ -79,6 +79,14 @@
second return value through an `output parameter' (there is no such
thing in Python).
+For the \function{ceil()}, \function{floor()}, and \function{modf()}
+functions, note that \emph{all} floating-point numbers of sufficiently
+large magnitude are exact integers. Python floats typically carry no more
+than 53 bits of precision (the same as the platform C double type), in
+which case any float \var{x} with \code{abs(\var{x}) >= 2**52}
+necessarily has no fractional bits.
+
+
Power and logarithmic functions:
\begin{funcdesc}{exp}{x}