#36030: SQLite backend: division with Decimal("x.0") operand discards fractional
portion of result
-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------
     Reporter:  Bartłomiej Nowak     |                    Owner:  VIZZARD-X
         Type:  Bug                  |                   Status:  assigned
    Component:  Database layer       |                  Version:  dev
  (models, ORM)                      |
     Severity:  Normal               |               Resolution:
     Keywords:  division             |             Triage Stage:  Accepted
  decimalfield sqlite                |
    Has patch:  1                    |      Needs documentation:  0
  Needs tests:  1                    |  Patch needs improvement:  0
Easy pickings:  0                    |                    UI/UX:  0
-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------
Description changed by Bob Kline:

Old description:

> == Expected Behavior ==
> When division is performed in Django, and at least one of the operands is
> a `decimal.Decimal` value created using the string constructor with at
> least one digit following the decimal point (for example,
> `Decimal("3.0")`), the fractional portion of the result should be
> retained. For example, `2 / Decimal("3.0")` should produce a value close
> to `0.6667`.
>
> == Observed Behavior ==
> When such a division is performed using the SQLite backend, integer
> ("floor") division is performed unless the decimal value has a non-zero
> fractional part. For example, `2 / Decimal("3.1")` produces
> `0.64516129032258064516`, but `2 / Decimal("3.0")` produces `0`.
>
> == Repro Case ==
> {{{
> #!/usr/bin/env python3
>
> """
> Repro case for ticket #36030.
> """
>
> from decimal import Decimal
> from django import setup
> from django.conf import settings
> from django.db import connection
> from django.db.models import Value, DecimalField, IntegerField
> from django.db.models.sql import Query
>
> settings.configure(
>     DATABASES={"default": {"ENGINE": "django.db.backends.sqlite3",
> "NAME": ":memory:"}},
>     INSTALLED_APPS=["django.contrib.contenttypes"],
> )
>
> setup()
> numerator = Value(2, output_field=IntegerField())
> denominator = Value(Decimal("3.0"), output_field=DecimalField())
> expression = numerator / denominator
> compiler = connection.ops.compiler("SQLCompiler")(Query(None),
> connection, None)
> sql, params = expression.resolve_expression(Query(None)).as_sql(compiler,
> connection)
> with connection.cursor() as cursor:
>     cursor.execute(f"SELECT {sql}", params)
>     result = cursor.fetchone()[0]
>     print("result:", result) # -> result: 0
> }}}
>
> == Notes ==
> This ticket originally reported that division using PostgreSQL as the
> backend did not consistently preserve precision when the denominator was
> a `Decimal` value. Further investigation confirmed that the same problem
> arises with SQLite, and that the inconsistent behavior is observed
> whether the `Decimal` operand is the numerator or the denominator.
> Testing showed that the other three officially supported database
> backends all preserve decimal precision in much the same way as native
> Python division mixing integer and decimal operands.
>
> It has been decided that Django does not need to enforce consistent
> division behavior across all backends, as long as there is a way to force
> preservation of the fractional portion of the result. With PostgreSQL,
> this is achieved if the `Decimal` value is created with the string
> constructor and includes at least one digit after the decimal point
> (e.g., `Decimal("3.0")`). With SQLite, even `Decimal("3.0")` fails to
> preserve the fractional portion of the result of the division operation.
> Therefore, the scope of this ticket has been narrowed to address only the
> behavior of the SQLite driver.
>
> Note that the [https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/5.2/ref/databases
> /#sqlite-decimal-handling Django documentation for decimal handling using
> the SQLite backend] says that for this backend "Decimal values are
> internally converted to the `REAL` data type."
>
> It was further decided that the user documentation should ''not''
> describe the remaining inconsistencies between backends.
>
> == Version Information ==
> * Python 3.12.3
> * Django 5.1.2
> * O/S Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS (6.8.0-88-generic x86_64)

New description:

 == Expected Behavior ==
 When division is performed in Django, and at least one of the operands is
 a `decimal.Decimal` value created using the string constructor with at
 least one digit following the decimal point (for example,
 `Decimal("3.0")`), the fractional portion of the result should be
 retained. For example, `2 / Decimal("3.0")` should produce a value close
 to `0.6667`.

 == Observed Behavior ==
 When such a division is performed using the SQLite backend, integer
 ("floor") division is performed unless the decimal value has a non-zero
 fractional part. For example, `2 / Decimal("3.1")` produces
 `0.64516129032258064516`, but `2 / Decimal("3.0")` produces `0`.

 == Repro Case ==
 {{{#!python
 #!/usr/bin/env python3

 """
 Repro case for ticket #36030.
 """

 from decimal import Decimal
 from django import setup
 from django.conf import settings
 from django.db import connection
 from django.db.models import Value, DecimalField, IntegerField
 from django.db.models.sql import Query

 settings.configure(
     DATABASES={"default": {"ENGINE": "django.db.backends.sqlite3", "NAME":
 ":memory:"}},
     INSTALLED_APPS=["django.contrib.contenttypes"],
 )

 setup()
 numerator = Value(2, output_field=IntegerField())
 denominator = Value(Decimal("3.0"), output_field=DecimalField())
 expression = numerator / denominator
 compiler = connection.ops.compiler("SQLCompiler")(Query(None), connection,
 None)
 sql, params = expression.resolve_expression(Query(None)).as_sql(compiler,
 connection)
 with connection.cursor() as cursor:
     cursor.execute(f"SELECT {sql}", params)
     result = cursor.fetchone()[0]
     print("result:", result) # -> result: 0
 }}}

 == Notes ==
 This ticket originally reported that division using PostgreSQL as the
 backend did not consistently preserve precision when the denominator was a
 `Decimal` value. Further investigation confirmed that the same problem
 arises with SQLite, and that the inconsistent behavior is observed whether
 the `Decimal` operand is the numerator or the denominator. Testing showed
 that the other three officially supported database backends all preserve
 decimal precision in much the same way as native Python division mixing
 integer and decimal operands.

 It has been decided that Django does not need to enforce consistent
 division behavior across all backends, as long as there is a way to force
 preservation of the fractional portion of the result. With PostgreSQL,
 this is achieved if the `Decimal` value is created with the string
 constructor and includes at least one digit after the decimal point (e.g.,
 `Decimal("3.0")`). With SQLite, even `Decimal("3.0")` fails to preserve
 the fractional portion of the result of the division operation. Therefore,
 the scope of this ticket has been narrowed to address only the behavior of
 the SQLite driver.

 Note that the [https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/5.2/ref/databases
 /#sqlite-decimal-handling Django documentation for decimal handling using
 the SQLite backend] says that for this backend "Decimal values are
 internally converted to the `REAL` data type."

 It was further decided that the user documentation should ''not'' describe
 the remaining inconsistencies between backends.

 == Version Information ==
 * Python 3.12.3
 * Django 5.1.2
 * O/S Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS (6.8.0-88-generic x86_64)

--
-- 
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/36030#comment:44>
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