PEP 238 – Changing the Division Operator
- Author:
- Moshe Zadka <moshez at zadka.site.co.il>, Guido van Rossum <guido at python.org>
- Status:
- Final
- Type:
- Standards Track
- Created:
- 11-Mar-2001
- Python-Version:
- 2.2
- Post-History:
- 16-Mar-2001, 26-Jul-2001, 27-Jul-2001
Table of Contents
- Abstract
- Motivation
- Variations
- Alternatives
- API Changes
- Command Line Option
- Semantics of Floor Division
- Semantics of True Division
- The Future Division Statement
- Open Issues
- Resolved Issues
- FAQ
- When will Python 3.0 be released?
- Why isn’t true division called float division?
- Why is there a need for
__truediv__
and__itruediv__
? - How do I write code that works under the classic rules as well as under the new rules without using
//
or a future division statement? - How do I specify the division semantics for
input()
,compile()
,execfile()
,eval()
andexec
? - What about code compiled by the codeop module?
- Will there be conversion tools or aids?
- Why is my question not answered here?
- Implementation
- Copyright
Abstract
The current division (/
) operator has an ambiguous meaning for numerical
arguments: it returns the floor of the mathematical result of division if the
arguments are ints or longs, but it returns a reasonable approximation of the
division result if the arguments are floats or complex. This makes
expressions expecting float or complex results error-prone when integers are
not expected but possible as inputs.
We propose to fix this by introducing different operators for different
operations: x/y
to return a reasonable approximation of the mathematical
result of the division (“true division”), x//y
to return the floor
(“floor division”). We call the current, mixed meaning of x/y
“classic division”.
Because of severe backwards compatibility issues, not to mention a major flamewar on c.l.py, we propose the following transitional measures (starting with Python 2.2):
- Classic division will remain the default in the Python 2.x series; true division will be standard in Python 3.0.
- The
//
operator will be available to request floor division unambiguously. - The future division statement, spelled
from __future__ import division
, will change the/
operator to mean true division throughout the module. - A command line option will enable run-time warnings for classic division applied to int or long arguments; another command line option will make true division the default.
- The standard library will use the future division statement and the
//
operator when appropriate, so as to completely avoid classic division.
Motivation
The classic division operator makes it hard to write numerical expressions
that are supposed to give correct results from arbitrary numerical inputs.
For all other operators, one can write down a formula such as x*y**2 + z
,
and the calculated result will be close to the mathematical result (within the
limits of numerical accuracy, of course) for any numerical input type (int,
long, float, or complex). But division poses a problem: if the expressions
for both arguments happen to have an integral type, it implements floor
division rather than true division.
The problem is unique to dynamically typed languages: in a statically typed language like C, the inputs, typically function arguments, would be declared as double or float, and when a call passes an integer argument, it is converted to double or float at the time of the call. Python doesn’t have argument type declarations, so integer arguments can easily find their way into an expression.
The problem is particularly pernicious since ints are perfect substitutes for
floats in all other circumstances: math.sqrt(2)
returns the same value as
math.sqrt(2.0)
, 3.14*100
and 3.14*100.0
return the same value, and
so on. Thus, the author of a numerical routine may only use floating point
numbers to test his code, and believe that it works correctly, and a user may
accidentally pass in an integer input value and get incorrect results.
Another way to look at this is that classic division makes it difficult to write polymorphic functions that work well with either float or int arguments; all other operators already do the right thing. No algorithm that works for both ints and floats has a need for truncating division in one case and true division in the other.
The correct work-around is subtle: casting an argument to float() is wrong if it could be a complex number; adding 0.0 to an argument doesn’t preserve the sign of the argument if it was minus zero. The only solution without either downside is multiplying an argument (typically the first) by 1.0. This leaves the value and sign unchanged for float and complex, and turns int and long into a float with the corresponding value.
It is the opinion of the authors that this is a real design bug in Python, and that it should be fixed sooner rather than later. Assuming Python usage will continue to grow, the cost of leaving this bug in the language will eventually outweigh the cost of fixing old code – there is an upper bound to the amount of code to be fixed, but the amount of code that might be affected by the bug in the future is unbounded.
Another reason for this change is the desire to ultimately unify Python’s numeric model. This is the subject of PEP 228 (which is currently incomplete). A unified numeric model removes most of the user’s need to be aware of different numerical types. This is good for beginners, but also takes away concerns about different numeric behavior for advanced programmers. (Of course, it won’t remove concerns about numerical stability and accuracy.)
In a unified numeric model, the different types (int, long, float, complex,
and possibly others, such as a new rational type) serve mostly as storage
optimizations, and to some extent to indicate orthogonal properties such as
inexactness or complexity. In a unified model, the integer 1 should be
indistinguishable from the floating point number 1.0 (except for its
inexactness), and both should behave the same in all numeric contexts.
Clearly, in a unified numeric model, if a==b
and c==d
, a/c
should
equal b/d
(taking some liberties due to rounding for inexact numbers), and
since everybody agrees that 1.0/2.0
equals 0.5, 1/2
should also equal
0.5. Likewise, since 1//2
equals zero, 1.0//2.0
should also equal
zero.
Variations
Aesthetically, x//y
doesn’t please everyone, and hence several variations
have been proposed. They are addressed here:
x div y
. This would introduce a new keyword. Sincediv
is a popular identifier, this would break a fair amount of existing code, unless the new keyword was only recognized under a future division statement. Since it is expected that the majority of code that needs to be converted is dividing integers, this would greatly increase the need for the future division statement. Even with a future statement, the general sentiment against adding new keywords unless absolutely necessary argues against this.div(x, y)
. This makes the conversion of old code much harder. Replacingx/y
withx//y
orx div y
can be done with a simple query replace; in most cases the programmer can easily verify that a particular module only works with integers so all occurrences ofx/y
can be replaced. (The query replace is still needed to weed out slashes occurring in comments or string literals.) Replacingx/y
withdiv(x, y)
would require a much more intelligent tool, since the extent of the expressions to the left and right of the/
must be analyzed before the placement of thediv(
and)
part can be decided.x \ y
. The backslash is already a token, meaning line continuation, and in general it suggests an escape to Unix eyes. In addition (this due to Terry Reedy) this would make things likeeval("x\y")
harder to get right.
Alternatives
In order to reduce the amount of old code that needs to be converted, several alternative proposals have been put forth. Here is a brief discussion of each proposal (or category of proposals). If you know of an alternative that was discussed on c.l.py that isn’t mentioned here, please mail the second author.
- Let
/
keep its classic semantics; introduce//
for true division. This still leaves a broken operator in the language, and invites to use the broken behavior. It also shuts off the road to a unified numeric model a la PEP 228. - Let int division return a special “portmanteau” type that behaves as an integer in integer context, but like a float in a float context. The problem with this is that after a few operations, the int and the float value could be miles apart, it’s unclear which value should be used in comparisons, and of course many contexts (like conversion to string) don’t have a clear integer or float preference.
- Use a directive to use specific division semantics in a module, rather than a future statement. This retains classic division as a permanent wart in the language, requiring future generations of Python programmers to be aware of the problem and the remedies.
- Use
from __past__ import division
to use classic division semantics in a module. This also retains the classic division as a permanent wart, or at least for a long time (eventually the past division statement could raise anImportError
). - Use a directive (or some other way) to specify the Python version for which a specific piece of code was developed. This requires future Python interpreters to be able to emulate exactly several previous versions of Python, and moreover to do so for multiple versions within the same interpreter. This is way too much work. A much simpler solution is to keep multiple interpreters installed. Another argument against this is that the version directive is almost always overspecified: most code written for Python X.Y, works for Python X.(Y-1) and X.(Y+1) as well, so specifying X.Y as a version is more constraining than it needs to be. At the same time, there’s no way to know at which future or past version the code will break.
API Changes
During the transitional phase, we have to support three division operators
within the same program: classic division (for /
in modules without a
future division statement), true division (for /
in modules with a future
division statement), and floor division (for //
). Each operator comes in
two flavors: regular, and as an augmented assignment operator (/=
or
//=
).
The names associated with these variations are:
- Overloaded operator methods:
__div__(), __floordiv__(), __truediv__(); __idiv__(), __ifloordiv__(), __itruediv__().
- Abstract API C functions:
PyNumber_Divide(), PyNumber_FloorDivide(), PyNumber_TrueDivide(); PyNumber_InPlaceDivide(), PyNumber_InPlaceFloorDivide(), PyNumber_InPlaceTrueDivide().
- Byte code opcodes:
BINARY_DIVIDE, BINARY_FLOOR_DIVIDE, BINARY_TRUE_DIVIDE; INPLACE_DIVIDE, INPLACE_FLOOR_DIVIDE, INPLACE_TRUE_DIVIDE.
- PyNumberMethod slots:
nb_divide, nb_floor_divide, nb_true_divide, nb_inplace_divide, nb_inplace_floor_divide, nb_inplace_true_divide.
The added PyNumberMethod
slots require an additional flag in tp_flags
;
this flag will be named Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_NEWDIVIDE
and will be included in
Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT
.
The true and floor division APIs will look for the corresponding slots and
call that; when that slot is NULL
, they will raise an exception. There is
no fallback to the classic divide slot.
In Python 3.0, the classic division semantics will be removed; the classic division APIs will become synonymous with true division.
Command Line Option
The -Q
command line option takes a string argument that can take four
values: old
, warn
, warnall
, or new
. The default is old
in Python 2.2 but will change to warn
in later 2.x versions. The old
value means the classic division operator acts as described. The warn
value means the classic division operator issues a warning (a
DeprecationWarning
using the standard warning framework) when applied
to ints or longs. The warnall
value also issues warnings for classic
division when applied to floats or complex; this is for use by the
fixdiv.py
conversion script mentioned below. The new
value changes
the default globally so that the /
operator is always interpreted as
true division. The new
option is only intended for use in certain
educational environments, where true division is required, but asking the
students to include the future division statement in all their code would be a
problem.
This option will not be supported in Python 3.0; Python 3.0 will always
interpret /
as true division.
(This option was originally proposed as -D
, but that turned out to be an
existing option for Jython, hence the Q – mnemonic for Quotient. Other names
have been proposed, like -Qclassic
, -Qclassic-warn
, -Qtrue
, or
-Qold_division
etc.; these seem more verbose to me without much advantage.
After all the term classic division is not used in the language at all (only
in the PEP), and the term true division is rarely used in the language – only
in __truediv__
.)
Semantics of Floor Division
Floor division will be implemented in all the Python numeric types, and will have the semantics of:
a // b == floor(a/b)
except that the result type will be the common type into which a and b are coerced before the operation.
Specifically, if a and b are of the same type, a//b
will be of that
type too. If the inputs are of different types, they are first coerced to a
common type using the same rules used for all other arithmetic operators.
In particular, if a and b are both ints or longs, the result has the same
type and value as for classic division on these types (including the case of
mixed input types; int//long
and long//int
will both return a long).
For floating point inputs, the result is a float. For example:
3.5//2.0 == 1.0
For complex numbers, //
raises an exception, since floor()
of a
complex number is not allowed.
For user-defined classes and extension types, all semantics are up to the implementation of the class or type.
Semantics of True Division
True division for ints and longs will convert the arguments to float and then
apply a float division. That is, even 2/1
will return a float (2.0)
,
not an int. For floats and complex, it will be the same as classic division.
The 2.2 implementation of true division acts as if the float type had
unbounded range, so that overflow doesn’t occur unless the magnitude of the
mathematical result is too large to represent as a float. For example,
after x = 1L << 40000
, float(x)
raises OverflowError
(note that
this is also new in 2.2: previously the outcome was platform-dependent, most
commonly a float infinity). But x/x
returns 1.0 without exception,
while x/1
raises OverflowError
.
Note that for int and long arguments, true division may lose information; this
is in the nature of true division (as long as rationals are not in the
language). Algorithms that consciously use longs should consider using
//
, as true division of longs retains no more than 53 bits of precision
(on most platforms).
If and when a rational type is added to Python (see PEP 239), true division for ints and longs should probably return a rational. This avoids the problem with true division of ints and longs losing information. But until then, for consistency, float is the only choice for true division.
The Future Division Statement
If from __future__ import division
is present in a module, or if
-Qnew
is used, the /
and /=
operators are translated to true
division opcodes; otherwise they are translated to classic division (until
Python 3.0 comes along, where they are always translated to true division).
The future division statement has no effect on the recognition or translation
of //
and //=
.
See PEP 236 for the general rules for future statements.
(It has been proposed to use a longer phrase, like true_division or modern_division. These don’t seem to add much information.)
Open Issues
We expect that these issues will be resolved over time, as more feedback is received or we gather more experience with the initial implementation.
- It has been proposed to call
//
the quotient operator, and the/
operator the ratio operator. I’m not sure about this – for some people quotient is just a synonym for division, and ratio suggests rational numbers, which is wrong. I prefer the terminology to be slightly awkward if that avoids unambiguity. Also, for some folks quotient suggests truncation towards zero, not towards infinity as floor division says explicitly. - It has been argued that a command line option to change the default is
evil. It can certainly be dangerous in the wrong hands: for example, it
would be impossible to combine a 3rd party library package that requires
-Qnew
with another one that requires-Qold
. But I believe that the VPython folks need a way to enable true division by default, and other educators might need the same. These usually have enough control over the library packages available in their environment. - For classes to have to support all three of
__div__()
,__floordiv__()
and__truediv__()
seems painful; and what to do in 3.0? Maybe we only need__div__()
and__floordiv__()
, or maybe at least true division should try__truediv__()
first and__div__()
second.
Resolved Issues
- Issue: For very large long integers, the definition of true division as
returning a float causes problems, since the range of Python longs is much
larger than that of Python floats. This problem will disappear if and when
rational numbers are supported.
Resolution: For long true division, Python uses an internal float type with native double precision but unbounded range, so that OverflowError doesn’t occur unless the quotient is too large to represent as a native double.
- Issue: In the interim, maybe the long-to-float conversion could be made to
raise
OverflowError
if the long is out of range.Resolution: This has been implemented, but, as above, the magnitude of the inputs to long true division doesn’t matter; only the magnitude of the quotient matters.
- Issue: Tim Peters will make sure that whenever an in-range float is
returned, decent precision is guaranteed.
Resolution: Provided the quotient of long true division is representable as a float, it suffers no more than 3 rounding errors: one each for converting the inputs to an internal float type with native double precision but unbounded range, and one more for the division. However, note that if the magnitude of the quotient is too small to represent as a native double, 0.0 is returned without exception (“silent underflow”).
FAQ
When will Python 3.0 be released?
We don’t plan that long ahead, so we can’t say for sure. We want to allow at least two years for the transition. If Python 3.0 comes out sooner, we’ll keep the 2.x line alive for backwards compatibility until at least two years from the release of Python 2.2. In practice, you will be able to continue to use the Python 2.x line for several years after Python 3.0 is released, so you can take your time with the transition. Sites are expected to have both Python 2.x and Python 3.x installed simultaneously.
Why isn’t true division called float division?
Because I want to keep the door open to possibly introducing rationals and making 1/2 return a rational rather than a float. See PEP 239.
Why is there a need for __truediv__
and __itruediv__
?
We don’t want to make user-defined classes second-class citizens. Certainly not with the type/class unification going on.
How do I write code that works under the classic rules as well as under the new rules without using //
or a future division statement?
Usex*1.0/y
for true division,divmod(x, y)
(PEP 228) for int division. Especially the latter is best hidden inside a function. You may also writefloat(x)/y
for true division if you are sure that you don’t expect complex numbers. If you know your integers are never negative, you can useint(x/y)
– while the documentation ofint()
says thatint()
can round or truncate depending on the C implementation, we know of no C implementation that doesn’t truncate, and we’re going to change the spec forint()
to promise truncation. Note that classic division (and floor division) round towards negative infinity, whileint()
rounds towards zero, giving different answers for negative numbers.
How do I specify the division semantics for input()
, compile()
, execfile()
, eval()
and exec
?
What about code compiled by the codeop module?
This is dealt with properly; see PEP 264.
Will there be conversion tools or aids?
Certainly. While these are outside the scope of the PEP, I should point out two simple tools that will be released with Python 2.2a3:Tools/scripts/finddiv.py
finds division operators (slightly smarter thangrep /
) andTools/scripts/fixdiv.py
can produce patches based on run-time analysis.
Why is my question not answered here?
Because we weren’t aware of it. If it’s been discussed on c.l.py and you believe the answer is of general interest, please notify the second author. (We don’t have the time or inclination to answer every question sent in private email, hence the requirement that it be discussed on c.l.py first.)
Implementation
Essentially everything mentioned here is implemented in CVS and will be released with Python 2.2a3; most of it was already released with Python 2.2a2.
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0238.txt
Last modified: 2022-10-05 16:48:43 GMT