+ 3
Sololearn python bug? 🤨
There is a wierd bug(?) that wasn't allowing me to finish simple task. If i multiply simple number for example: 4000, 50, 49, 40, by 1.1 I expect to get results like: 4400.0, 55.0, 53.9, 44.0 However I get results like 4400.0, 55.000000000001, 53.900000000006, 44.0 It wouldn't be that confusing if it wouldn't be random Try it yourself: print(4000*1.1) print(50*1.1) print(49*1.1) print(40*1.1)
6 Réponses
+ 7
Piotr Ś ,
what we can do depends a bit on what we are going to do with these results.
▪︎if it is just to output the number with a specific number of decimal places, we can use print() with f-string that can format the output. the numbers itself keeps as they are, but the output is according the arguments that are used with f-string
▪︎if we need these numbers for mathematical or comparison operations, we can use round() function which creates new numbers that are rounded to the specific number of decimal places.
▪︎for high precision calculations we can use the decimal module of python, that provides support for fast correctly-rounded decimal floating point arithmetic
an other way of doing the calculation can also help:
print(49*1.1, 49 * 110 /100) => results in: 53.900000000000006 53.9
.
+ 5
Not only Sololearn code playground, It will give you the same output in any ide.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/588004/is-floating-point-math-broken
+ 5
Oh I see, thank you Simba, anyway how do you deal with it? In my example I had to compare two numbers by == or > etc, so this bug messed it all. Finally I just added round(x,2) to round particular part, but it feels insane to add it to all floats" just in case".
+ 2
Shubham Bhatia good 😊👍but who asked 🤣🤣🤣😂😂
+ 1
Oh thank you Lothar this is indeed a great reply:
*110/100, instead *1.1 seems to fix it :)
It's really great to have so friendly and knowledgeable community.
0
I like sololearn Coding 💪 playground. 💯