Hi Robert, Thanks, this explains what is going on. Would there be a way of including the regular expressions procedure in the show() command? The output of the line you proposed is a string, which doesn't show well in show(). :)
Thanks again, Stan On Nov 17, 8:05 pm, Robert Bradshaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Any decimal number that goes into maxima turns into a 53-bit floating > point number (at least by default), which then turns into a 53 bit > MPFR coming out. The reason all the trailing 0's are exposed is to > show how much precision is known. Maxima (as far as I know) doesn't > have the concept of different real numbers to different precisions. > > I would imagine a lot of these issues will go away the less we pass > through Maxima. In the meantime, using regular expressions to remove > the trailing zeros is probably you're best bet. > > sage: s = latex(0.6*x); s > {0.600000000000000 x} > sage: re.sub(r'(\.[1-9]+)0+', r'\1', s) > '{0.6 x}' > > - Robert > > On Nov 17, 2008, at 8:19 AM, Stan Schymanski wrote: > > > > > Dear Marshall, > > > Thanks a lot for looking into this. I tried similar approaches as > > well, > > and so did the original poster. However, as soon as you introduce a > > symbolic variable into the equation, latex does weird things such as: > > > latex(RealField(8)(0.6)*x) > > produces > > "{0.601600000000000 x}" > > > Does this look like a bug to you, too? > > > Cheers > > Stan > > > Marshall Hampton wrote: > >> There are a number of interact examples on the wiki (such as the > >> Gram- > >> Schmidt one athttp://wiki.sagemath.org/interact/linear_algebra) that > >> work around this problem by casting to a field of low precision, for > >> example doing something like > > >> latex(RealField(8)(0.6)) > > >> produces "0.60". > > >> Hope that helps, > >> Marshall Hampton > > >> On Nov 17, 9:02 am, Stan Schymanski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>> A week older and still not smarter... > >>> Sorry for the noise, but I am still trying to find a way of getting > >>> useful latex output for equations that contain decimal numbers. It > >>> seems that the previous posts passed below the radars of those that > >>> might know the answer, so I am trying to push it to the surface > >>> again. > >>> Isn't anybody else bothered by rows of 0s in the latex() or show() > >>> output? > > >>> Cheers > >>> Stan > > >>> On Nov 10, 1:25 pm, Stan Schymanski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>>> It seems thatlatex(eqn) just evaluates eqn and prints the result > >>>> inlatexnotation, without cutting off annoying 0s or giving the > >>>> user the > >>>> opportunity to set a precision. I find this very annoying, as > >>>> suchlatexoutput is not very useful for illustration purposes. > >>>> Does anyone > >>>> know a trick how to automatically round ugly numbers for thelatex > >>>> output? I feel that this should be incorporated into thelatex() > >>>> code, > >>>> though. > >>>> Here is another illustration of the problem: > > >>>> latex(0.6*x) > >>>> {0.600000000000000 x} > > >>>> latex(0.6.n(digits=4)*x) > >>>> {0.599998500000000 x} > > >>>> The second attempt became even uglier! > > >>>> This is on sage 3.1.4 on an Intel Macbook Pro. > > >>>> Thanks for your help! (Anyone?) > >>>> Stan > > > -- > > ________________________________________ > > > Stan Schymanski > > Scientist > > Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry > > Postfach 10 01 64 > > D-07701 Jena > > > Phone: +49.3641.576264 > > Fax: +49.3641.577274 > > WWW:http://www.bgc-jena.mpg.de/~sschym > > > Biospheric Theory and Modelling Group > >http://www.bgc-jena.mpg.de/bgc-theory/ > > _________________________________________ > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-support URLs: http://www.sagemath.org -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---