The conversion is not supported for decimal integers AFAIK, however '0b123.456' is always valid. I guess you can always get a decimal number convertor onto Python-recipes
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 9:05 PM, Grant Olson <k...@grant-olson.net> wrote: > On 3/30/2010 11:13 AM, aditya wrote: > > To get the decimal representation of a binary number, I can just do > > this: > > > > int('11',2) # returns 3 > > > > But decimal binary numbers throw a ValueError: > > > > int('1.1',2) # should return 1.5, throws error instead. > > > > Is this by design? It seems to me that this is not the correct > > behavior. > > > > Well technically that would be a 'radix point', not a decimal point. > > But I think the problem is that computers don't store fractional values > that way internally. They either use floating or fixed point math. You > would never look at raw binary data on a computer and see something like > '1010.1010', and no one would write it that way, and no language (that I > know of) would accept that as a valid value if you did something like "x > = 0b1010.1010" > > So in that sense, it might not be an intentional oversight, but it's not > a very practical or useful feature. > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
-- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list