fractions
--- 有理數¶原始碼:Lib/fractions.py
The fractions
module provides support for rational number arithmetic.
A Fraction instance can be constructed from a pair of integers, from another rational number, or from a string.
The first version requires that numerator and denominator are instances
of numbers.Rational
and returns a new Fraction
instance
with value numerator/denominator
. If denominator is 0
, it
raises a ZeroDivisionError
. The second version requires that
other_fraction is an instance of numbers.Rational
and returns a
Fraction
instance with the same value. The next two versions accept
either a float
or a decimal.Decimal
instance, and return a
Fraction
instance with exactly the same value. Note that due to the
usual issues with binary floating point (see 浮點數運算:問題與限制), the
argument to Fraction(1.1)
is not exactly equal to 11/10, and so
Fraction(1.1)
does not return Fraction(11, 10)
as one might expect.
(But see the documentation for the limit_denominator()
method below.)
The last version of the constructor expects a string or unicode instance.
The usual form for this instance is:
[sign] numerator ['/' denominator]
where the optional sign
may be either '+' or '-' and
numerator
and denominator
(if present) are strings of
decimal digits (underscores may be used to delimit digits as with
integral literals in code). In addition, any string that represents a finite
value and is accepted by the float
constructor is also
accepted by the Fraction
constructor. In either form the
input string may also have leading and/or trailing whitespace.
Here are some examples:
>>> from fractions import Fraction
>>> Fraction(16, -10)
Fraction(-8, 5)
>>> Fraction(123)
Fraction(123, 1)
>>> Fraction()
Fraction(0, 1)
>>> Fraction('3/7')
Fraction(3, 7)
>>> Fraction(' -3/7 ')
Fraction(-3, 7)
>>> Fraction('1.414213 \t\n')
Fraction(1414213, 1000000)
>>> Fraction('-.125')
Fraction(-1, 8)
>>> Fraction('7e-6')
Fraction(7, 1000000)
>>> Fraction(2.25)
Fraction(9, 4)
>>> Fraction(1.1)
Fraction(2476979795053773, 2251799813685248)
>>> from decimal import Decimal
>>> Fraction(Decimal('1.1'))
Fraction(11, 10)
The Fraction
class inherits from the abstract base class
numbers.Rational
, and implements all of the methods and
operations from that class. Fraction
instances are hashable,
and should be treated as immutable. In addition,
Fraction
has the following properties and methods:
在 3.2 版的變更: The Fraction
constructor now accepts float
and
decimal.Decimal
instances.
在 3.9 版的變更: The math.gcd()
function is now used to normalize the numerator
and denominator. math.gcd()
always returns an int
type.
Previously, the GCD type depended on numerator and denominator.
在 3.11 版的變更: Underscores are now permitted when creating a Fraction
instance
from a string, following PEP 515 rules.
在 3.11 版的變更: Fraction
implements __int__
now to satisfy
typing.SupportsInt
instance checks.
在 3.12 版的變更: Space is allowed around the slash for string inputs: Fraction('2 / 3')
.
在 3.12 版的變更: Fraction
instances now support float-style formatting, with
presentation types "e"
, "E"
, "f"
, "F"
, "g"
, "G"
and "%""
.
在 3.13 版的變更: Formatting of Fraction
instances without a presentation type
now supports fill, alignment, sign handling, minimum width and grouping.
Numerator of the Fraction in lowest term.
Denominator of the Fraction in lowest term.
Return a tuple of two integers, whose ratio is equal to the original Fraction. The ratio is in lowest terms and has a positive denominator.
在 3.8 版被加入.
Return True
if the Fraction is an integer.
在 3.12 版被加入.
Alternative constructor which only accepts instances of
float
or numbers.Integral
. Beware that
Fraction.from_float(0.3)
is not the same value as Fraction(3, 10)
.
Alternative constructor which only accepts instances of
decimal.Decimal
or numbers.Integral
.
備註
From Python 3.2 onwards, you can also construct a
Fraction
instance directly from a decimal.Decimal
instance.
Finds and returns the closest Fraction
to self
that has
denominator at most max_denominator. This method is useful for finding
rational approximations to a given floating-point number:
>>> from fractions import Fraction
>>> Fraction('3.1415926535897932').limit_denominator(1000)
Fraction(355, 113)
or for recovering a rational number that's represented as a float:
>>> from math import pi, cos
>>> Fraction(cos(pi/3))
Fraction(4503599627370497, 9007199254740992)
>>> Fraction(cos(pi/3)).limit_denominator()
Fraction(1, 2)
>>> Fraction(1.1).limit_denominator()
Fraction(11, 10)
Returns the greatest int
<= self
. This method can
also be accessed through the math.floor()
function:
>>> from math import floor
>>> floor(Fraction(355, 113))
3
Returns the least int
>= self
. This method can
also be accessed through the math.ceil()
function.
The first version returns the nearest int
to self
,
rounding half to even. The second version rounds self
to the
nearest multiple of Fraction(1, 10**ndigits)
(logically, if
ndigits
is negative), again rounding half toward even. This
method can also be accessed through the round()
function.
Provides support for formatting of Fraction
instances via the
str.format()
method, the format()
built-in function, or
Formatted string literals.
If the format_spec
format specification string does not end with one
of the presentation types 'e'
, 'E'
, 'f'
, 'F'
, 'g'
,
'G'
or '%'
then formatting follows the general rules for fill,
alignment, sign handling, minimum width, and grouping as described in the
format specification mini-language. The "alternate
form" flag '#'
is supported: if present, it forces the output string
to always include an explicit denominator, even when the value being
formatted is an exact integer. The zero-fill flag '0'
is not
supported.
If the format_spec
format specification string ends with one of
the presentation types 'e'
, 'E'
, 'f'
, 'F'
, 'g'
,
'G'
or '%'
then formatting follows the rules outlined for the
float
type in the 格式規格 (Format Specification) 迷你語言 section.
Here are some examples:
>>> from fractions import Fraction
>>> format(Fraction(103993, 33102), '_')
'103_993/33_102'
>>> format(Fraction(1, 7), '.^+10')
'...+1/7...'
>>> format(Fraction(3, 1), '')
'3'
>>> format(Fraction(3, 1), '#')
'3/1'
>>> format(Fraction(1, 7), '.40g')
'0.1428571428571428571428571428571428571429'
>>> format(Fraction('1234567.855'), '_.2f')
'1_234_567.86'
>>> f"{Fraction(355, 113):*>20.6e}"
'********3.141593e+00'
>>> old_price, new_price = 499, 672
>>> "{:.2%} price increase".format(Fraction(new_price, old_price) - 1)
'34.67% price increase'
也參考
numbers
模組The abstract base classes making up the numeric tower.