# Formatting numbers consistently in Python

I have a series of numbers:

from numpy import r_
r_[10**(-9), 10**(-3), 3*10**(-3), 6*10**(-3), 9*10**(-3), 1.5*10**(-2)]


and I would like to have them displayed in a plot's legend in the form:

a 10^(b)


(with ^ meaning superscript)

so that e.g. the third number becomes 3 10^(-3).

I know I have to use Python's string formatting operator % for this, but I don't see a way to do this. Can someone please show me how (or show me an alternative way)?

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you can also try str.format - docs.python.org/2/library/string.html#formatstrings – dmg Feb 22 '13 at 9:09
How are you creating the plot? Is it just some ASCII-art-like plot or you are using matplotlib or other libraries? – Bakuriu Feb 22 '13 at 9:15
does '%s 10^(%s)' % (number1, number2) work? – dmg Feb 22 '13 at 9:19
@Bakuriu I'm using matplotlib. I'll add the tag. – rubenvb Feb 22 '13 at 9:19

If you are sure you don't need more than a fixed number of places after the decimal dot, then:

>>> from numpy import r_
>>> a = r_[10**(-9), 10**(-3), 3*10**(-3), 6*10**(-3), 9*10**(-3), 1.5*10**(-2)]
>>> for x in a: print "%.1e"%x
...
1.0e-09
1.0e-03
3.0e-03
6.0e-03
9.0e-03
1.5e-02


The catch here is that were you to use %.0e as a format, the last number would be printed as 1e-2

EDIT: Since you're using matplotlib, then it's a different story: you could use the TeX rendering engine. A quick-and-dirty example:

fig = plt.figure()

x = 1.5*10**(-2)
l = ("%.0e"%x).split("e")
x_str = r"$%s \times 10^{%s}$" % (l[0], l[1] )

ax.set_title(x_str)

plt.show()


which would indeed be a little cleaner with new .format string formatting.

EDIT2: Just for completeness and future reference, here's my take on the OP's way from the comments:

x = 1.5*10**(-2)
l = ("%.0e"%x).split("e")
x_str = r"$%s \times 10^{%s}$" % ( l[0], str(int(l[1])) )


Here I'm converting to an int and back to avoid leading zeros: -02 -> -2 etc.

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I believe this is not what he wanted. I see no superscript here. – Bakuriu Feb 22 '13 at 9:18
Is there a way to 1) put the exponent in superscript, and 2) replace the e with a 10? – rubenvb Feb 22 '13 at 9:19
@rubenvb see my edited answer. – ev-br Feb 22 '13 at 9:30
@Zhenya OK, I'm almost there. Problem is that frexp returns base-2 decompositions, which is not quite what I want. I can't seem to find frexp10 or equivalent. The format string way is: '{0}.10^{1}'.format(round(f,1),e) which only leaves the superscript to be typeset by TeX. – rubenvb Feb 22 '13 at 9:44
Ah, I see you already found a way :-) Thanks! – rubenvb Feb 22 '13 at 9:45
list_item = (multiply_number,degree_number)
displayed_items = [list_item, list_item, ....]
for item in displayed_items:
print '{0}*10^({1})'.format(*item)


Create list of tupels with number you want to display. And just output them using format(). Don't forget to use *(this for using each item in tuple).

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