On Jul 7, 4:12 pm, Ethan Furman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Greetings, List! > > I'm working on a numeric data type for measured values that will keep > track of and limit results to the number of significant digits > originally defined for the values in question. > > I am doing this primarily because I enjoy playing with numbers, and also > to get some experience with unit testing. > > At this point I have the __init__ portion finished, and am starting on > the various operator functions. > > Questions for the group: > > 1) Any reason to support the less common operators? > i.e. <<, >>, &, ^, | Assuming you are working with decimal numbers, the &, ^, | may not be of any use for your application. The shift operators may be useful but there are two possible ways to define their behavior:
1) Multiplication or division by powers of 2. This mimics the common use of those operators as used with binary numbers. 2) Multiplication or division by powers of 10. > > 2) What, exactly, does .__pos__() do? An example would help, too. The unary + operator is frequently added for symmetry with -, however it is also used to force an existing number to match a new precision setting. For example, using the decimal module: >>> from decimal import * >>> t=Decimal('1.23456') >>> t Decimal("1.23456") >>> getcontext().prec = 5 >>> +t Decimal("1.2346") > > Thanks for the feedback. > -- > Ethan casevh -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list