On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 5:18 PM, Daniel Fetchinson <fetchin...@googlemail.com> wrote: > Hi folks, often times in science one expresses a value (say > 1.03789291) and its error (say 0.00089) in a short way by parentheses > like so: 1.0379(9) > > One can vary things a bit, but let's take the simplest case when we > only keep 1 digit of the error (and round it of course) and round the > value correspondingly. I've been searching around for a simple > function that would take 2 float arguments and would return a string > but didn't find anything although something tells me it's been done a > gazillion times. > > What would be the simplest such function?
Well, this basically works: >>> def format_error(value, error): ... precision = int(math.floor(math.log(error, 10))) ... format = "%%.%df(%%d)" % max(-precision, 0) ... return format % (round(value, -precision), ... int(round(error / 10 ** precision))) ... >>> format_error(1.03789291, 0.00089) '1.0379(9)' Note that "math.floor(math.log(error, 10))" may return the wrong decimal precision due to binary floating point rounding error, which could produce some strange results: >>> format_error(10378929, 1000) '10378900(10)' So you'll probably want to use decimals instead: def format_error(value, error): value = decimal.Decimal(value) error = decimal.Decimal(error) value_scale = value.log10().to_integral(decimal.ROUND_FLOOR) error_scale = error.log10().to_integral(decimal.ROUND_FLOOR) precision = value_scale - error_scale if error_scale > 0: format = "%%.%dE" % max(precision, 0) else: format = "%%.%dG" % (max(precision, 0) + 1) value_str = format % value.quantize(decimal.Decimal("10") ** error_scale) error_str = '(%d)' % error.scaleb(-error_scale).to_integral() if 'E' in value_str: index = value_str.index('E') return value_str[:index] + error_str + value_str[index:] else: return value_str + error_str >>> format_error(1.03789291, 0.00089) '1.0379(9)' >>> format_error(103789291, 1000) '1.03789(1)E+08' I haven't tested this thoroughly, so use at your own risk. :-) Cheers, Ian -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list