On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 14:54:41 -0700 (PDT), James Harris <james.harri...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>On 22 Aug, 10:27, David <71da...@libero.it> wrote: > >... (snipped a discussion on languages and other systems interpreting >numbers with a leading zero as octal) > >> > Either hexadecimal should have been 0h or octal should >> > have been 0t :=3D) >> >> >> I have seen the use of Q/q instead in order to make it clearer. I still >> prefer Smalltalk's 16rFF and 8r377. >> >> >> Two interesting options. In a project I have on I have also considered >> using 0q as indicating octal. I maybe saw it used once somewhere else >> but I have no idea where. 0t was a second choice and 0c third choice >> (the other letters of oct). 0o should NOT be used for obvious reasons. >> >> So you are saying that Smalltalk has <base in decimal>r<number> where >> r is presumably for radix? That's maybe best of all. It preserves the >> syntactic requirement of starting a number with a digit and seems to >> have greatest flexibility. Not sure how good it looks but it's >> certainly not bad. I opine that a letter is better; special characters are a valuable piece of real estate. However for floating point you need at least three letters because a floating point number has three parts: the fixed point point, the exponent base, and the exponent. Now we can represent the radices of the individual parts with the 'r'scheme, e.g., 2r101001, but we need separate letters to designate the exponent base and the exponent. B and E are the obvious choices, though we want to be careful about a confusion with 'b' in hex. For example, using 'R', 3R20.1B2E16Rac is 20.1 in trinary (6 1/3) times 2**172 (hex ac). I grant that this example looks a bit gobbledegookish, but normal usage would be much simpler. The notation doesn't handle balanced trinary; however I opine that balanced trinary requires special notation. Richard Harter, c...@tiac.net http://home.tiac.net/~cri, http://www.varinoma.com No one asks if a tree falls in the forest if there is no one there to see it fall. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list