7.11. fpformat
— Floating point conversions¶
Deprecated since version 2.6: The fpformat
module has been removed in Python 3.
The 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 String Formatting Operations section.
The fpformat
module defines the following functions and an exception:
-
fpformat.
fix
(x, digs)¶ Format x as
[-]ddd.ddd
with digs digits after the point and at least one digit before. Ifdigs <= 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.
-
fpformat.
sci
(x, digs)¶ Format x as
[-]d.dddE[+-]ddd
with digs digits after the point and exactly one digit before. Ifdigs <= 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
fpformat.
NotANumber
¶ Exception raised when a string passed to
fix()
orsci()
as the x parameter does not look like a number. This is a subclass ofValueError
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'