Question

Some results file produced by Fortran programs report double precision numbers (in scientific notation) using the letter D instead of E, for instance:

1.2345D+02
# instead of
1.2345E+02

I need to process huge amounts of this data using Python, and I just realized it cannot read the numbers in the D notation, for instance:

>>> A = 1.0D+01
  File "<stdin>", line 1
    A = 1.0D+01
           ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax

Can I change my locale and let Python know that D means E? I really would not want to make a global search-and-replace!

Was it helpful?

Solution

The simplest way, from your Python program, would be just to add a step before you interpret each entry:

>>> val = "1.5698D+03"  # 1,569.8
>>> print float(val.replace('D', 'E'))
1569.8

OTHER TIPS

If you are dealing with lots of data and/or are doing a lot computations with that data, you might consider using the fortran-friendly numpy module which supports double-precision fortran format out of the box.

>>> numpy.float('1.5698D+03')
1569.8

Another option is the fortranformat library for Python. It will read strings and interpret them according to a FORTRAN format statement. i.e.

>>> import fortranformat as ff
>>> line = ff.FortranRecordReader('(F10.0)')
>>> line.read('1.5698D+03')
[1569.8]

Install with easy_install -U fortranformat

Any questions, email me (I'm the author).

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