pow()
Ivan Van Laningham
ivanlan at callware.com
Wed Jul 21 15:15:13 EDT 1999
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Wed Jul 21 15:15:13 EDT 1999
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Hi All-- Gary Herron wrote (and Christian Tismer did too): Thanks to both of you. > > This is from the library manual named "2.3 Built-in Functions": > > pow (x, y[, z]) > > Return x to the power y; if z is present, return x to the power y, > modulo z (computed more efficiently than pow(x, y) % z). The arguments > must have numeric types. With mixed operand types, the rules for binary > arithmetic operators apply. The effective operand type is also the type > of the result; if the result is not expressible in this type, the > function raises an exception; e.g., pow(2, -1) or pow(2, 35000) is not > allowed. > So why didn't this turn up when I searched www.python.org for references to "pow" ??? The explanation is perfectly clear, but I didn't see the reference to the Built-in Functions page; when I searched, nothing came up (that was pertinent, anyway). <there-might-be-doc-bugs-on-summa-you-mugs>-ly y'rs, Ivan;-) ---------------------------------------------- Ivan Van Laningham Callware Technologies, Inc. ivanlan at callware.com ivanlan at home.com http://www.pauahtun.org See also: http://www.foretec.com/python/workshops/1998-11/proceedings.html Army Signal Corps: Cu Chi, Class of '70 ----------------------------------------------
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