For function A below, I get a different result when I use est += XXX as compared to using est = est + XXX. The former gives a result of 1.33227e-15 while the latter gives a result of 8.88178e-16.
On the other hand, for function B below, I get the same result regardless of whether I use est += XXX or est = est + XXX.
Would anyone be able to explain why x+=y is equivalent to x=x+y in function B but not in A?
function A
double A(int nTerm){
    const double PI = 3.141592653589793238463;    
    double est = 0;
    double counter = 0;
    do {
        est += ( 16 * pow(-1,counter) )/ (2*counter+1) * pow((double)1/5, 2*counter+1) 
             - ( 4 * pow(-1,counter) )/ (2*counter+1) * pow((double)1/239, 2*counter+1);
        counter++;  
    } while (counter<=nTerm);
    
    return est-PI;
}
function B
double B(int nTerm){
    double est = 0;
    double counter = 0;
    do {
        est += counter;
        counter++;  
    } while (counter<=nTerm);
    return est;
}
 
     
    