On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 04:37:16 +0000, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 04:08:46 +0000, Dan Sommers wrote about temperatures: > >> And -1 K. > > You josh, but there are negative temperatures in Kelvin. They're hotter > than infinitely hot. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_temperature
That's what I get for stopping with an undergraduate degree in physics. Thanks for the link; I learned something interesting today. ObPython: My program retrieves temperatures (in Kelvins) from an external device (the details of which I am not at liberty to discuss) and stores them in the cloud (because that's where all the cool kids store data these days), and there's something really weird going on. Here's my code and the output, filtered through http://sscce.org/: $ cat ./program.py import cloudstorageinterface temperature1 = cloudstorageinterface.get_a_temperature() temperature2 = cloudstorageinterface.get_a_temperature() print('temperature1 is', temperature1, 'K') print('temperature2 is', temperature2, 'K') if temperature2 > temperature1: print('temperature2 is hotter than temperature1') if temperature2 < temperature1: print('temperature1 is hotter than temperature2') if temperature2 == temperature1: print("this can't happen") $ python ./program.py temperature1 is -100 K temperature2 is 100 K temperature2 is hotter than temperature1 But everyone knows that -100K is hotter than 100K. I tried converting to UTC, but that didn't help. What am I missing? -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list