Question

How do I convert a scientific notation to floating point number? Here is an example of what I want to avoid:

Python 2.7.3 (default, Apr 14 2012, 08:58:41) [GCC] on linux2
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>>> a=[78.40816326530613, 245068094.16326532]
>>> print a[0]/a[1]
3.19944395589e-07
>>> print float(a[0]/a[1])
3.19944395589e-07
>>> print float(a[0])/float(a[1])
3.19944395589e-07
Was it helpful?

Solution 2

The scientific notation is just a convenient way of printing a floating point number. When there are a lot of leading zeros as in your example, the scientific notation might be easier to read.

In order to print a specific number of digits after a decimal point, you can specify a format string with print:

print 'Number is: %.8f' % (float(a[0]/a[1]))

Or you can use format() as in the other answers.

OTHER TIPS

Use string formatting:

>>> "{:.50f}".format(float(a[0]/a[1]))
'0.00000031994439558937568872208504280885144055446290'

That is already a floating point number, it just prints in a friendly format. If you want to show a certain amount of decimal places when printing, use format:

>>> print format(a[0]/a[1], '.65f')
0.00000031994439558937568872208504280885144055446289712563157081604
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