# test parsing of floats inf = float('inf') # it shouldn't matter where the decimal point is if the exponent balances the value print(float('1234') - float('0.1234e4')) print(float('1.015625') - float('1015625e-6')) # very large integer part with a very negative exponent should cancel out print('%.4e' % float('9' * 60 + 'e-60')) print('%.4e' % float('9' * 60 + 'e-40')) # many fractional digits print(float('.' + '9' * 70)) print(float('.' + '9' * 70 + 'e20')) print(float('.' + '9' * 70 + 'e-50') == float('1e-50')) # tiny fraction with large exponent print(float('.' + '0' * 60 + '1e10') == float('1e-51')) print(float('.' + '0' * 60 + '9e25') == float('9e-36')) print(float('.' + '0' * 60 + '9e40') == float('9e-21')) # ensure that accuracy is retained when value is close to a subnormal print(float('1.00000000000000000000e-37')) print(float('10.0000000000000000000e-38')) print(float('100.000000000000000000e-39')) # very large exponent literal print(float('1e4294967301')) print(float('1e-4294967301')) print(float('1e18446744073709551621')) print(float('1e-18446744073709551621'))