The IEEE-754 encoding of $s$, $e$ and $m$ requires a fixed number of continuous bits dedicated to each value. Originally two encodings were defined: binary32 and binary64. $s$ is always encoded in a single leading bit, whilst (8,23) and (11,53) bits are used for the (exponent, mantissa) encodings respectively.
The IEEE-754 encoding of $s$, $e$ and $m$ requires a fixed number of continuous bits dedicated to each value. Originally two encodings were defined: binary32 and binary64. $s$ is always encoded in a single leading bit, whilst (8,23) and (11,53) bits are used for the (exponent, mantissa) encodings respectively.