format a measurement result and its error in "scientific" way
jmfauth
wxjmfauth at gmail.com
Fri Feb 17 04:17:32 EST 2012
On 16 fév, 01:18, Daniel Fetchinson <fetchin... at googlemail.com> wrote:
> Hi folks, often times in science one expresses a value (say
> 1.03789291) and its error (say 0.00089) in a short way by parentheses
> like so: 1.0379(9)
>
Before swallowing any Python solution, you should
realize, the values (value, error) you are using are
a non sense :
1.03789291 +/- 0.00089
You express "more precision" in the value than
in the error.
---
As ex, in a 1.234(5) notation, the "()" is usually
used to indicate the accuracy of the digit in "()".
Eg 1.345(7)
Typographically, the "()" is sometimes replaced by
a bold digit ou a subscripted digit.
jmf
More information about the Python-list
mailing list