string.atoi and string.atol broken?
Mike Moum
DoubleMPi at Netscape.com
Tue Jan 25 18:23:16 EST 2005
I think there may be a bug in string.atoi and string.atol. Here's some
output from idle.
> Python 2.3.4 (#2, Jan 5 2005, 08:24:51)
> [GCC 3.3.5 (Debian 1:3.3.5-5)] on linux2
> Type "copyright", "credits" or "license()" for more information.
>
> ****************************************************************
> Personal firewall software may warn about the connection IDLE
> makes to its subprocess using this computer's internal loopback
> interface. This connection is not visible on any external
> interface and no data is sent to or received from the Internet.
> ****************************************************************
>
> IDLE 1.0.4
>>>> import string as s
>>>> s.atoi('2',3)
> 2
>>>> s.atoi('4',3)
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "<pyshell#2>", line 1, in -toplevel-
> s.atoi('4',3)
> File "/usr/lib/python2.3/string.py", line 220, in atoi
> return _int(s, base)
> ValueError: invalid literal for int(): 4
>>>> s.atoi('12',11)
> 13
>>>> s.atoi('13',4)
> 7
>>>> s.atoi('12',4)
> 6
>>>> s.atoi('8',4)
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "<pyshell#6>", line 1, in -toplevel-
> s.atoi('8',4)
> File "/usr/lib/python2.3/string.py", line 220, in atoi
> return _int(s, base)
> ValueError: invalid literal for int(): 8
>>>>
s.atoi('4',3) should result in 11
s.atoi('13',4) should result in 31
s.atoi('12',4) should result in 30
s.atoi('8',4) is legitimate, but it generates an error.
Is this a bug, or am I missing something obvious?
TIA,
Mike
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