问题
I've some lists and more complex structures containing floats. When printing them, I see the floats with a lot of decimal digits, but when printing, I don't need all of them. So I would like to define a custom format (e.g. 2 or 3 decimals) when floats are printed.
I need to use floats and not Decimal. Also, I'm not allowed to truncate/round floats.
Is there a way to change the default behavior?
回答1:
You are not allowed to monkeypatch C types, like Ignacio said.
However, if you are terribly pressed in doing so and you know some C, you could go modify the Python interpreter source code yourself, then recompile it into a custom solution. Once I modified one of the standard behaviors for lists and it was only a moderate pain.
I suggest you find a better solution, such as just printing the floats with the "%0.2f"
printf notation:
for item in mylist:
print '%0.2f' % item,
or
print " ".join('%0.2f' % item for item in mylist)
回答2:
No, because that would require modifying float.__str__()
, but you aren't allowed to monkeypatch C types. Use string interpolation or formatting instead.
回答3:
I ran into this issue today, and I came up with a different solution. If you're worried about what it looks like when printed, you can replace the stdout file object with a custom one that, when write() is called, searches for any things that look like floats, and replaces them with your own format for them.
class ProcessedFile(object):
def __init__(self, parent, func):
"""Wraps 'parent', which should be a file-like object,
so that calls to our write transforms the passed-in
string with func, and then writes it with the parent."""
self.parent = parent
self.func = func
def write(self, str):
"""Applies self.func to the passed in string and calls
the parent to write the result."""
return self.parent.write(self.func(str))
def writelines(self, text):
"""Just calls the write() method multiple times."""
for s in sequence_of_strings:
self.write(s)
def __getattr__(self, key):
"""Default to the parent for any other methods."""
return getattr(self.parent, key)
if __name__ == "__main__":
import re
import sys
#Define a function that recognises float-like strings, converts them
#to floats, and then replaces them with 1.2e formatted strings.
pattern = re.compile(r"\b\d+\.\d*\b")
def reformat_float(input):
return re.subn(pattern, lambda match: ("{:1.2e}".format(float(match.group()))), input)[0]
#Use this function with the above class to transform sys.stdout.
#You could write a context manager for this.
sys.stdout = ProcessedFile(sys.stdout, reformat_float)
print -1.23456
# -1.23e+00
print [1.23456] * 6
# [1.23e+00, 1.23e+00, 1.23e+00, 1.23e+00, 1.23e+00, 1.23e+00]
print "The speed of light is 299792458.0 m/s."
# The speed of light is 3.00e+08 m/s.
sys.stdout = sys.stdout.parent
print "Back to our normal formatting: 1.23456"
# Back to our normal formatting: 1.23456
It's no good if you're just putting numbers into a string, but eventually you'll probably want to write that string to some sort of file somewhere, and you may be able to wrap that file with the above object. Obviously there's a bit of a performance overhead.
Fair warning: I haven't tested this in Python 3, I have no idea if it would work.
回答4:
>>> a = 0.1
>>> a
0.10000000000000001
>>> print a
0.1
>>> print "%0.3f" % a
0.100
>>>
From the Python docs, repr(a)
would give 17 digits (as seen by just typing a
at the interactive prompt, but str(a)
(automatically performed when you print it) rounds to 12.
Edit: Most basic hack solution... You have to use your own class though, so...yeah.
>>> class myfloat(float):
... def __str__(self):
... return "%0.3f" % self.real
>>> b = myfloat(0.1)
>>> print repr(b)
0.10000000000000001
>>> print b
0.100
>>>
回答5:
Upgrade to Python 3.1. It doesn't use more digits than necessary.
Python 3.1.2 (r312:79147, Apr 15 2010, 15:35:48)
[GCC 4.4.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> 0.1
0.1
回答6:
If you are using C language, you can either use #define
or "%*.*f"
to do that, e.g.
printf("%*.*f",4,2,variable);
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3264828/change-default-float-print-format