On 2006-05-08, Thomas Bartkus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> does python support true rations, which means that 1/3 is a >> true one-third and not 0.333333333 rounded off at some >> arbitrary precision? > > At risk of being boring ;-) > > - Python supports both rational and irrational numbers as > floating point numbers the way any language on any digital > computer does - imprecisely. > > A "true" (1/3) can only be expressed as a fraction.
At the risk of being both boring and overly pedantic, that's not true. In base 3, the value in question is precisely representable in floating point: 0.1 > As soon as you express it as a floating point - you are in a > bit of trouble because that's impossible. It's not possible in base 2 or base 10. It's perfectly possible in base 9 (used by the Nenets of Northern Russia) base 12 (popular on planets where everybody has twelve toes) or base 60 (used by th Sumerians). [I don't know if any of those peoples used floating point in those bases -- I'm just pointing out that your prejudice towards base 10 notation is showing.] > You can not express (1/3) as a floating point in Python any > more than you can do it with pencil and paper. That's true assuming base 2 in Python and base 10 on paper. The base used by Python is pretty much etched in stone (silicon, to be precise). There used to be articles about people working on base-3 logic gates, but base-3 logic never made it out of the lab. However, you can pick any base you want when using paper and pencil. > You can be precise and write "1/3" or you can surrender to > arithmetic convenience and settle for the imprecise by writing > "0.333333333", chopping it off at some arbitrary precision. Or you can write 0.1 3 :) -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Yes, Private at DOBERMAN!! visi.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list