6

I have two variables : count, which is a number of my filtered objects, and constant value per_page. I want to divide count by per_page and get integer value but I no matter what I try - I'm getting 0 or 0.0 :

>>> count = friends.count()
>>> print count
1
>>> per_page = 2
>>> print per_page
2
>>> pages = math.ceil(count/per_pages)
>>> print pages
0.0
>>> pages = float(count/per_pages)
>>> print pages
0.0

What am I doing wrong, and why math.ceil gives float number instead of int ?

2
  • it works when I do it like this : count = float(count), per_page = float(per_page), pages = math.ceil(count/per_page) and finally pages = int(pages) . But that's a bit dumb way.
    – tom_pl
    Jul 29, 2010 at 22:07
  • See [ Why doesn’t this division work in python? ](stackoverflow.com/questions/1787249/…). Jul 29, 2010 at 22:14

6 Answers 6

15

Python does integer division when both operands are integers, meaning that 1 / 2 is basically "how many times does 2 go into 1", which is of course 0 times. To do what you want, convert one operand to a float: 1 / float(2) == 0.5, as you're expecting. And, of course, math.ceil(1 / float(2)) will yield 1, as you expect.

(I think this division behavior changes in Python 3.)

6

Integer division is the default of the / operator in Python < 3.0. This has behaviour that seems a little weird. It returns the dividend without a remainder.

>>> 10 / 3
3

If you're running Python 2.6+, try:

from __future__ import division

>>> 10 / 3
3.3333333333333335

If you're running a lower version of Python than this, you will need to convert at least one of the numerator or denominator to a float:

>>> 10 / float(3)
3.3333333333333335

Also, math.ceil always returns a float...

>>> import math 
>>> help(math.ceil)

ceil(...)
    ceil(x)

    Return the ceiling of x as a float.
    This is the smallest integral value >= x.
2
  • 1
    Not to be picky, but it's the numerator, not nominator =]
    – Falmarri
    Jul 29, 2010 at 22:28
  • I missed that in the docs focusing on the 'integer' part :P thanks
    – tom_pl
    Jul 29, 2010 at 22:41
1

From Python documentation (math module):

math.ceil(x)

Return the ceiling of x as a float, the smallest integer value greater than or equal to x.

0

They're integers, so count/per_pages is zero before the functions ever get to do anything beyond that. I'm not a Python programmer really but I know that (count * 1.0) / pages will do what you want. There's probably a right way to do that however.

edit — yes see @mipadi's answer and float(x)

2
  • 1
    Rather than multiplying by 1.0 everywhere, why don't you just use from __future__ import division?
    – dan04
    Aug 4, 2010 at 13:44
  • I might do just that if I knew anything at all about Python :-)
    – Pointy
    Aug 4, 2010 at 13:52
0

its because how you have it set up is performing the operation and then converting it to a float try

count = friends.count()
print count

per_page = float(2)
print per_page

pages = math.ceil(count/per_pages)

print pages
pages = count/per_pages

By converting either count or per_page to a float all of its future operations should be able to do divisions and end up with non whole numbers

0
>>> 10 / float(3)
3.3333333333333335
>>> #Or 
>>> 10 / 3.0
3.3333333333333335
>>> #Python make any decimal number to float
>>> a = 3
>>> type(a)
<type 'int'>
>>> b = 3.0
>>> type(b)
<type 'float'>
>>> 

The best solution maybe is to use from __future__ import division

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.