Le 20/09/2015 20:28, rjf a écrit :
If the original program has constants that are good for ordinary
floating precision,
then increasing the precision without increasing the accuracy may not do
what
you want.
For example, converting 3.1415926 (etc) by extending with decimal or
binary 0's might
On Sun, Sep 20, 2015 at 11:28 AM, rjf wrote:
> If the original program has constants that are good for ordinary floating
> precision,
> then increasing the precision without increasing the accuracy may not do
> what
> you want.
> For example, converting 3.1415926 (etc) by extending with decimal o
If the original program has constants that are good for ordinary floating
precision,
then increasing the precision without increasing the accuracy may not do
what
you want.
For example, converting 3.1415926 (etc) by extending with decimal or
binary 0's might
not do the right thing.
In fact, co
Yes, a more complete regex can be found easily with google or by using the
one from src/sage/repl/preparse.py
On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 6:11:25 PM UTC+2, vdelecroix wrote:
> Would not work with 'x=.8' (can be fixed with replacing the first \+
with a \*) nor 'x=2e3' (this is more annoyin
On 20/09/15 12:59, Volker Braun wrote:
On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 5:02:12 PM UTC+2, tdumont wrote:
Without changing the default precision, and using your solution, we
revert to something where we must "declare" the float values:
x=field(137.8)
in place of
x=137.8
There is an app for th
On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 5:02:12 PM UTC+2, tdumont wrote:
>
> Without changing the default precision, and using your solution, we
> revert to something where we must "declare" the float values:
> x=field(137.8)
> in place of
> x=137.8
>
There is an app for that!
$ echo 'x=137.8' | se
Le 20/09/2015 17:11, William Stein a écrit :
On Sun, Sep 20, 2015 at 8:02 AM, Thierry Dumont
wrote:
Le 20/09/2015 16:26, Volker Braun a écrit :
Why change the default? Global state is always a liability; Just don't
do it. Make the field a parameter to your code:
def frobnicate(x,y, field=Non
On Sun, Sep 20, 2015 at 8:02 AM, Thierry Dumont
wrote:
> Le 20/09/2015 16:26, Volker Braun a écrit :
>>
>> Why change the default? Global state is always a liability; Just don't
>> do it. Make the field a parameter to your code:
>>
>> def frobnicate(x,y, field=None)
>> if field is None:
>>
Le 20/09/2015 16:26, Volker Braun a écrit :
Why change the default? Global state is always a liability; Just don't
do it. Make the field a parameter to your code:
def frobnicate(x,y, field=None)
if field is None:
from sage.structure.element import get_coercion_model
field
On Sunday, September 20, 2015, Volker Braun wrote:
> Why change the default? Global state is always a liability; Just don't do
> it.
>
+1. I was about to post the same.Explicit is better than implicit.
> Make the field a parameter to your code:
>
> def frobnicate(x,y, field=None)
> if
Why change the default? Global state is always a liability; Just don't do
it. Make the field a parameter to your code:
def frobnicate(x,y, field=None)
if field is None:
from sage.structure.element import get_coercion_model
field = get_coercion_model().common_parent(x, y)
Dear Colleagues,
I have managed to code this...
But I have a question before pushing the tickket.
What I can do nowadays:
sage: set_precision(100)
sage: x=1.
sage: x.parent()
Real Field with 100 bits of precision
sage: ComplexNumber(1.,2.).parent()
Complex Field with 99 bits of precision
sage:
12 matches
Mail list logo