symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Doc/library/fpformat.rst
author Gareth Stockwell <gareth.stockwell@accenture.com>
Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:40:40 +0100
branchgraphics-phase-3
changeset 111 345f1c88c950
parent 1 2fb8b9db1c86
permissions -rw-r--r--
Fixes to syborg-graphicswrapper.vcproj These changes allow syborg-graphicswrapper to link against the hostthreadadapter and khronosapiwrapper libraries built by the graphics.simulator component. The .vcproj file uses relative paths, which requires that the following three packages are laid out as follows: os/ graphics adapt/ graphics.simulator qemu


:mod:`fpformat` --- Floating point conversions
==============================================

.. module:: fpformat
   :synopsis: General floating point formatting functions.
   :deprecated:
   
.. deprecated:: 2.6
    The :mod:`fpformat` module has been removed in Python 3.0.
   
.. sectionauthor:: Moshe Zadka <moshez@zadka.site.co.il>


The :mod:`fpformat` module defines functions for dealing with floating point
numbers representations in 100% pure Python.

.. note::

   This module is unnecessary: everything here can be done using the ``%`` string
   interpolation operator described in the :ref:`string-formatting` section.

The :mod:`fpformat` module defines the following functions and an exception:


.. function:: fix(x, digs)

   Format *x* as ``[-]ddd.ddd`` with *digs* digits after the point and at least one
   digit before. If ``digs <= 0``, the decimal point is suppressed.

   *x* can be either a number or a string that looks like one. *digs* is an
   integer.

   Return value is a string.


.. function:: sci(x, digs)

   Format *x* as ``[-]d.dddE[+-]ddd`` with *digs* digits after the  point and
   exactly one digit before. If ``digs <= 0``, one digit is kept and the point is
   suppressed.

   *x* can be either a real number, or a string that looks like one. *digs* is an
   integer.

   Return value is a string.


.. exception:: NotANumber

   Exception raised when a string passed to :func:`fix` or :func:`sci` as the *x*
   parameter does not look like a number. This is a subclass of :exc:`ValueError`
   when the standard exceptions are strings.  The exception value is the improperly
   formatted string that caused the exception to be raised.

Example::

   >>> import fpformat
   >>> fpformat.fix(1.23, 1)
   '1.2'