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# Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
"""Abstract Base Classes (ABCs) for numbers, according to PEP 3141.
TODO: Fill out more detailed documentation on the operators."""
############ Maintenance notes #########################################
#
# ABCs are different from other standard library modules in that they
# specify compliance tests. In general, once an ABC has been published,
# new methods (either abstract or concrete) cannot be added.
#
# Though classes that inherit from an ABC would automatically receive a
# new mixin method, registered classes would become non-compliant and
# violate the contract promised by ``isinstance(someobj, SomeABC)``.
#
# Though irritating, the correct procedure for adding new abstract or
# mixin methods is to create a new ABC as a subclass of the previous
# ABC.
#
# Because they are so hard to change, new ABCs should have their APIs
# carefully thought through prior to publication.
#
# Since ABCMeta only checks for the presence of methods, it is possible
# to alter the signature of a method by adding optional arguments
# or changing parameter names. This is still a bit dubious but at
# least it won't cause isinstance() to return an incorrect result.
#
#
#######################################################################
=
"""All numbers inherit from this class.
If you just want to check if an argument x is a number, without
caring what kind, use isinstance(x, Number).
"""
=
# Concrete numeric types must provide their own hash implementation
= None
## Notes on Decimal
## ----------------
## Decimal has all of the methods specified by the Real abc, but it should
## not be registered as a Real because decimals do not interoperate with
## binary floats (i.e. Decimal('3.14') + 2.71828 is undefined). But,
## abstract reals are expected to interoperate (i.e. R1 + R2 should be
## expected to work if R1 and R2 are both Reals).
"""Complex defines the operations that work on the builtin complex type.
In short, those are: a conversion to complex, .real, .imag, +, -,
*, /, **, abs(), .conjugate, ==, and !=.
If it is given heterogeneous arguments, and doesn't have special
knowledge about them, it should fall back to the builtin complex
type as described below.
"""
=
"""Return a builtin complex instance. Called for complex(self)."""
"""True if self != 0. Called for bool(self)."""
return != 0
"""Retrieve the real component of this number.
This should subclass Real.
"""
"""Retrieve the imaginary component of this number.
This should subclass Real.
"""
"""self + other"""
"""other + self"""
"""-self"""
"""+self"""
"""self - other"""
return + -
"""other - self"""
return - +
"""self * other"""
"""other * self"""
"""self / other: Should promote to float when necessary."""
"""other / self"""
"""self ** exponent; should promote to float or complex when necessary."""
"""base ** self"""
"""Returns the Real distance from 0. Called for abs(self)."""
"""(x+y*i).conjugate() returns (x-y*i)."""
"""self == other"""
"""To Complex, Real adds the operations that work on real numbers.
In short, those are: a conversion to float, trunc(), divmod,
%, <, <=, >, and >=.
Real also provides defaults for the derived operations.
"""
=
"""Any Real can be converted to a native float object.
Called for float(self)."""
"""trunc(self): Truncates self to an Integral.
Returns an Integral i such that:
* i > 0 iff self > 0;
* abs(i) <= abs(self);
* for any Integral j satisfying the first two conditions,
abs(i) >= abs(j) [i.e. i has "maximal" abs among those].
i.e. "truncate towards 0".
"""
"""Finds the greatest Integral <= self."""
"""Finds the least Integral >= self."""
"""Rounds self to ndigits decimal places, defaulting to 0.
If ndigits is omitted or None, returns an Integral, otherwise
returns a Real. Rounds half toward even.
"""
"""divmod(self, other): The pair (self // other, self % other).
Sometimes this can be computed faster than the pair of
operations.
"""
return
"""divmod(other, self): The pair (other // self, other % self).
Sometimes this can be computed faster than the pair of
operations.
"""
return
"""self // other: The floor() of self/other."""
"""other // self: The floor() of other/self."""
"""self % other"""
"""other % self"""
"""self < other
< on Reals defines a total ordering, except perhaps for NaN."""
"""self <= other"""
# Concrete implementations of Complex abstract methods.
"""complex(self) == complex(float(self), 0)"""
return
"""Real numbers are their real component."""
return +
"""Real numbers have no imaginary component."""
return 0
"""Conjugate is a no-op for Reals."""
return +
"""To Real, Rational adds numerator and denominator properties.
The numerator and denominator values should be in lowest terms,
with a positive denominator.
"""
=
"""The numerator of a rational number in lowest terms."""
"""The denominator of a rational number in lowest terms.
This denominator should be positive.
"""
# Concrete implementation of Real's conversion to float.
"""float(self) = self.numerator / self.denominator
It's important that this conversion use the integer's "true"
division rather than casting one side to float before dividing
so that ratios of huge integers convert without overflowing.
"""
return /
"""Integral adds methods that work on integral numbers.
In short, these are conversion to int, pow with modulus, and the
bit-string operations.
"""
=
"""int(self)"""
"""Called whenever an index is needed, such as in slicing"""
return
"""self ** exponent % modulus, but maybe faster.
Accept the modulus argument if you want to support the
3-argument version of pow(). Raise a TypeError if exponent < 0
or any argument isn't Integral. Otherwise, just implement the
2-argument version described in Complex.
"""
"""self << other"""
"""other << self"""
"""self >> other"""
"""other >> self"""
"""self & other"""
"""other & self"""
"""self ^ other"""
"""other ^ self"""
"""self | other"""
"""other | self"""
"""~self"""
# Concrete implementations of Rational and Real abstract methods.
"""float(self) == float(int(self))"""
return
"""Integers are their own numerators."""
return +
"""Integers have a denominator of 1."""
return 1