Any number which cannot be written as the sum of positive and negative powers of 2 cannot be exactly represented as a binary floating-point number.
The common IEEE formats for 32- and 64-bit representations of floating-point numbers impose further constraints; they limit the number of binary digits in both the significand and the exponent. So there are maximum and minimum representable numbers (approximately +/- 10^308 (base-10) if memory serves) and limits to the precision of a number that can be represented. This limit on the precision means that, for 64-bit numbers, the difference between the exponent of the largest power of 2 and the smallest power in a number is limited to 52, so if your number includes a term in 2^52 it can't also include a term in 2^-1.
Simple examples of numbers which cannot be exactly represented in binary floating-point numbers include 1/3, 2/3, 1/5, 10^5000.
Since the set of floating-point numbers (in any representation) is finite, and the set of real numbers is infinite, one algorithm to find a real number which is not exactly representable as a floating-point number is to select a real number at random. The probability that the real number is exactly representable as a floating-point number is 0.