string formatter %x and a class instance with __int__ or __long__ cannot handle long
Kenji Noguchi
tokyo246 at gmail.com
Wed Jun 20 23:24:28 EDT 2007
Hi
I'm using Python 2.4.4 on 32bit x86 Linux. I have a problem with printing
hex string for a value larger than 0x800000000 when the value is given to
% operator via an instance of a class with __int__(). If I pass a long value
to % operator it works just fine.
Example1 -- pass a long value directly. this works.
>>> x=0x80000000
>>> x
2147483648L
>>> type(x)
<type 'long'>
>>> "%08x" % x
'80000000'
Example2 -- pass an instance of a class with __int__()
>>> class X:
... def __init__(self, v):
... self.v = v
... def __int__(self):
... return self.v
...
>>> y = X(0x80000000)
>>> "%08x" % y
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
TypeError: int argument required
>>>
The behavior looks inconsistent. By the way __int__ actually
returned a long type value in the Example2. The "%08x" allows
either int or long in the Example1, however it accepts int only
in the Example2. Is this a bug or expected?
by the way same thing happends on a 64bit system with a
value of 0x8000000000000000.
Regards,
Kenji Noguchi
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