On 30/12/2013 12:16, matt.doolittl...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday, December 27, 2013 1:49:54 PM UTC-5, Ned Batchelder wrote:
On 12/27/13 1:09 PM, matt.doolittl...@gmail.com wrote:

On Friday, December 27, 2013 11:27:58 AM UTC-5, Roy Smith wrote:

In article <0c33b7e4-edc9-4e1e-b919-fec210c92...@googlegroups.com>,



   matt.doolittl...@gmail.com wrote:







I am on Ubuntu 12.10.   I am still working with the 2 decimal places.



Sometime ago i had this issue and I forget how i solved it. maybe i used



datetime? thanks!







That's strange.  Linux should give you time to the microsecond, or



something in that range.







Please post the *exact* code you're running.  The code you posted



earlier is obviously only a fragment of some larger program, so we can



only guess what's happening.  Assuming your program is in a file called



"prog.py", run the following commands and copy-paste the output:





i cant run it that way.  i tried using the python prompt in terminal but got 
nothing.  but here is all the code relevant to this issue:

#all the imports

import sys

import posixpath

import time

from time import strftime

from datetime import datetime

import os

import wx

import cPickle as pickle

import gnuradio.gr.gr_threading as _threading





#the function that writes the time values

   def update(self, field_values):



          now = datetime.now()



          #logger ---------------

          #  new line to write on

          self.logfile.write('\n')

          #  write date, time, and seconds from the epoch

          self.logfile.write('%s\t'%(strftime("%Y-%m-%d",)))

          self.logfile.write('%s\t'%(now.strftime("%H:%M:%S",)))

          self.logfile.write('%s\t'%(time.time()))

          # list to store dictionary keys in tis order

          keys = ["duid", "nac",  "tgid", "source", "algid", "kid"]

          # loop through the keys in the right order

          for k in keys:

              #  get the value of the current key

              f = field_values.get(k, None)

              # if data unit has value...

              if f:

                  #  output the value with trailing tab

                  self.logfile.write('%s\t'%(str(f)))

              # if data unit doesnt have this value print a tab

              else:

                  self.logfile.write('\t')

          #end logger ----------------



          #if the field 'duid' == 'hdu', then clear fields

          if field_values['duid'] == 'hdu':

              self.clear()

          elif field_values['duid'] == 'ldu1':

              self.clear()

          elif field_values['duid'] == 'ldu2':

              self.clear()

          #elif field_values['duid'] == 'tdu':

           #   self.clear()

          #loop through all TextCtrl fields storing the key/value pairs in k, v

          for k,v in self.fields.items():

              # get the dict value for this TextCtrl

              f = field_values.get(k, None)

              # if the value is empty then set the new value

              if f:

                  v.SetValue(f)



#sample output in a .txt file:



2013-12-27      12:07:33        1388164053.18

2013-12-27      12:07:33        1388164053.36

2013-12-27      12:07:33        1388164053.54

2013-12-27      12:07:33        1388164053.73

2013-12-27      12:07:33        1388164053.91

2013-12-27      12:07:34        1388164054.11

2013-12-27      12:07:34        1388164054.28

2013-12-27      12:07:34        1388164054.48

2013-12-27      12:07:34        1388164054.66

2013-12-27      12:07:34        1388164054.84

2013-12-27      12:07:37        1388164057.62

2013-12-27      12:07:37        1388164057.81

2013-12-27      12:07:37        1388164057.99

2013-12-27      12:07:38        1388164058.18

2013-12-27      12:07:38        1388164058.37

2013-12-27      12:07:38        1388164058.54

2013-12-27      12:07:38        1388164058.73

2013-12-27      12:07:38        1388164058.92



Thanks!





Instead of:



      "%s" % time.time()



try:



      "%.6f" % time.time()



%.6f is a formatting code meaning, floating-point number, 6 decimal places.



--

Ned Batchelder, http://nedbatchelder.com

thanks a bunch.  the "%.6f"  was the cure.  can you please point me to the doc 
for formatting time?  Thanks!


Would you please read and action this https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython to prevent us seeing the double line spacing above, thanks.

--
My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask what you can do for our language.

Mark Lawrence

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