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Python Doesn't Round Numbers the Way You Might Think

Python Doesn't Round Numbers the Way You Might Think

Episode 211 Published 1 year, 9 months ago
Description

Does Python round numbers the same way you learned back in math class? You might be surprised by the default method Python uses and the variety of ways to round numbers in Python. Christopher Trudeau is back on the show this week, bringing another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects.

Christopher discusses his recent video course, “Rounding Numbers in Python.” He covers rounding bias and how to avoid introducing it into your dataset. We dig into the various rounding strategies and how to implement them in Python.

We also share several other articles and projects from the Python community, including a news roundup, a fast Python linter for error-free and maintainable code, the decline of the user interface, more thoughts on Python in Excel, a discussion about calendar versioning for Python, a financial database as a Python module, and a project to prettify the colors of your terminal user interfaces.

This episode is sponsored by Sentry.

Topics:

  • 00:00:00 – Introduction
  • 00:02:06 – NumPy 2.0.0 Release Notes
  • 00:02:52 – Python 3.13.0 beta 3 released
  • 00:03:05 – Announcing the PSF Board Candidates for 2024!
  • 00:03:27 – Prohibiting Outlook Email Domains
  • 00:04:31 – Ruff: A Python Linter for Error-Free and Maintainable Code
  • 00:09:31 – Sponsor: Sentry
  • 00:10:35 – The Decline of the User Interface
  • 00:19:14 – My Thoughts on Python in Excel
  • 00:26:30 – Rounding Numbers in Python
  • 00:30:53 – Video Course Spotlight
  • 00:32:13 – PEP 2026: Calendar Versioning for Python
  • 00:42:37 – Financial Database as a Python Module
  • 00:45:34 – prettypretty: Build Awesome Terminal User Interfaces
  • 00:47:48 – Thanks and goodbye

News:

Show Links:

  • Ruff: A Python Linter for Error-Free and Maintainable Code – Ruff is an extremely fast, modern linter with a simple interface, making it straightforward to use. It also aims to be a drop-in replacement for other linting and formatting tools, like Pylint, isort, and Black. It’s no surprise it’s quickly becoming one of the most popular Python linters.
  • The Decline of the User Interface – “Software has never looked cooler, but user interface design and user experience have taken a sharp turn for the worse.”
  • My Th
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