On Aug 24, 8:21�pm, Mel <mwil...@the-wire.com> wrote: > Mensanator wrote: > > [ ... ] > > >> If you want your data file to have values entered in hex, or oct, or even > >> unary (1=one, 11=two, 111=three, 1111=four...) you can. > > > Unary? I think you'll find that Standard Positional Number > > Systems are not defined for radix 1. > > It has to be tweaked. �If the only digit you have is 0 then your numbers > take the form > > 0*1 + 0*1**2 + 0*1**3 ... > > and every number has an infinitely long representation. �If you cheat and > take a 1 digit instead then it becomes workable.
Not really. If your single digit is one, you still have an infinitely long representation only instead of every position being zero, every position is one. So either the only number that can be represented is 0, or the only number that can be represented is infinity. No amount of tweaking can fix this. So, to use radix 1, you have to abandon the concept of "Standard" (contains a 0) AND abandon "Positional" (infinitely long representation). It's all in TAOCP by Knuth if you want to get it straight. You can have a radix 1 number system, but is meaningless to speak of "unary" in the same context as hex, decimal, octal & binary. > > � � � � Mel. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list