[Python-ideas] Python Numbers as Human Concept Decimal System
Mark H. Harris
harrismh777 at gmail.com
Sat Mar 8 06:40:47 CET 2014
On Friday, March 7, 2014 3:24:06 PM UTC-6, Andrew Barnert wrote:
> The decision was discussed at the time, and all the pros and cons were
> hashed out. If you're not willing to read that discussion, your opinion
> that the change was a mistake is worth exactly as much as that of any
> individual user who asked for the change.
>
hi Andrew, I have been studying the python-ideas archive & the python-dev
archive all
night. I have read hundreds of posts. I am finding something very
interesting. My proposal
has been coming up (time and again) in different flavors for many years;
with all the same
people participating (with all of the very same discussion almost verbatim).
Just for history sake, I thought you might be interested in a blast from
the past from Raymond
Hettinger in response to Lennart Benschop who made the decimal literal
proposal in Oct, 2007:
Just for historical context only:
On Oct 26, 1:54 am, Lennart Benschop <[hidden email]<http://python.6.x6.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=node&node=1580823&i=0>>
wrote:
> My proposal:
> - Any decimal constant suffixed with the letter "D" or "d" will be
> interpreted as a literal of the Decimal type. This also goes for
> decimal constants with exponential notation.
There's nothing new here that hasn't already been proposed and
discussed on python-dev. There were no major objections to the idea;
however, it will need to wait until there is a good C implementation
of the decimal module (which is in the works but coming along very,
very slowly).
{from the history department}
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