New submission from STINNER Victor <vstin...@redhat.com>:
time.mktime() returns a floating point number: >>> type(time.mktime(time.localtime())) <class 'float'> The documentation says: "It returns a floating point number, for compatibility with :func:`.time`." time.time() returns a float because it has sub-second resolution, but mktime() returns an integer number of seconds. Would it make sense to change mktime() return type from float to int? I would like to change mktime() return type to make the function more consistent: inputs are integers, it sounds wrong to me to return float. The result should be integer as well. How much code would it break? I guess that the main impact are unit tests relying on repr(time.mktime(t)) exact value. But it's easy to fix the tests: use int(time.mktime(t)) or "%.0f" % time.mktime(t) to never get ".0", or use float(time.mktime(t))) to explicitly cast for a float (that which be a bad but quick fix). Note: I wrote and implemented the PEP 564 to avoid any precision loss. mktime() will not start loosing precision before year 285,422,891 (which is quite far in the future ;-)). ---------- components: Library (Lib) messages: 339632 nosy: belopolsky, p-ganssle, vstinner priority: normal severity: normal status: open title: Change time.mktime() return type from float to int? versions: Python 3.8 _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <https://bugs.python.org/issue36558> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com