Lies in education [was Re: The "loop and a half"]
bartc
bc at freeuk.com
Wed Oct 11 17:35:58 EDT 2017
On 11/10/2017 21:52, breamoreboy at gmail.com wrote:
>> More importantly is the fact that due to your magnificent
performance recently you have
> been promoted to be the General Manager of my Dream Team.
Thanks, I guess.
> You can of course cement your place when you explain how, in your language, converting an invalid
piece of user input, which should be an integer, is always converted to
zero, and how you handle the inevitable divide by zero errors that will
always, eventually, occur.
You mean it shouldn't do what happens here (Py3):
a = input("? ").split()
x = int(a[0])
y = int(a[1])
print (x,y)
print (x/y)
and somebody enters '10 0' ? I don't think you can do much about that.
However since that thread I've tweaked the way I do this, so that here
[non-Python code]:
print "? "
readln a, b # read each as int, float or string
println a/b # floating point divide
this produces these a/b results for various inputs:
10 20 # 0.500000
10,20 # 0.500000
10skjhf 20 # error, divide string by int
17.9 2 # 8.950000
10 # error, divide int by string ("")
# (blank) error, divide string by string
.1e10 1e5 # 10000.000000
ten twenty # error, divide string by string
For throwaway programs, or for testing, or for trusted input, this is
perfectly reasonable. For perfect error checking, you need to do a bit
more work on either verifying input, or using more sophisticated parsing.
--
bartc
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