int(x) is such that"If/x/is floating point, the conversion truncates towards zero."
I understand that to mean int() drops the decimal part.

Today, I couldn't repro what you described, but I saw a bunch of support cases like that back at Softimage.

On 09/11/2012 1:46 PM, Bradley Gabe wrote:
Yup, they are type double, but I was assuming the int() function would do a more intelligent conversion.

Have to do int(round(value)) whenever converting from float to int.

On Fri, Nov 9, 2012 at 12:42 PM, Stephen Blair <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Playcontrol values are floating point, so sometimes you don't get
    back an exact integer
    and
    print int( 99.999 ) will print 99






    On 09/11/2012 1:23 PM, Bradley Gabe wrote:
    Opening a new XSI scene, the frame range is set from 1 to 100 by
    default.
    If I run the following Python code:

    print Application.GetValue("PlayControl.Out")

    the output is 100.0


    if I try to directly convert it to an integer:

    print int(Application.GetValue("PlayControl.Out"))

    the output is 99

    Anyone know what is going on?



Reply via email to