100

Suppose I have 8.8333333333333339, and I want to convert it to 8.84. How can I accomplish this in Python?

round(8.8333333333333339, 2) gives 8.83 and not 8.84. I am new to Python or programming in general.

I don't want to print it as a string, and the result will be further used. For more information on the problem, please check Tim Wilson's Python Programming Tips: Loan and payment calculator.

5
  • 4
    round(8.8333333333333339 , 2) will give 8.83 never 8.84 it seems. Commented Dec 23, 2010 at 12:16
  • 46
    Why 8.84? 8.8333333... should be rounded to 8.83 when aiming for two decimal places. Commented Dec 23, 2010 at 12:17
  • 1
    if you want to print the value use a format such as print "%.2f"%8.8333333333333339. this will print the value with 2 digit Commented Dec 23, 2010 at 12:19
  • I edited the title because this comes up as an early result for "python round float," and it's probably not what most people are looking for. Hopefully, the new title makes things more clear. Commented Oct 4, 2017 at 4:01
  • 1
    Does this answer your question? Limiting floats to two decimal points Commented Jan 19, 2021 at 6:45

12 Answers 12

110

8.833333333339 (or 8.833333333333334, the result of 106.00/12) properly rounded to two decimal places is 8.83. Mathematically it sounds like what you want is a ceiling function. The one in Python's math module is named ceil:

import math v = 8.8333333333333339 print(math.ceil(v*100)/100) # -> 8.84 

Respectively, the floor and ceiling functions generally map a real number to the largest previous or smallest following integer which has zero decimal places — so to use them for 2 decimal places the number is first multiplied by 102 (or 100) to shift the decimal point and is then divided by it afterwards to compensate.

If you don't want to use the math module for some reason, you can use this (minimally tested) implementation I just wrote:

def ceiling(x): n = int(x) return n if n-1 < x <= n else n+1 

How all this relates to the linked Loan and payment calculator problem:

screenshot of loan calculator output

From the sample output it appears that they rounded up the monthly payment, which is what many call the effect of the ceiling function. This means that each month a little more than 112 of the total amount is being paid. That made the final payment a little smaller than usual — leaving a remaining unpaid balance of only 8.76.

It would have been equally valid to use normal rounding producing a monthly payment of 8.83 and a slightly higher final payment of 8.87. However, in the real world people generally don't like to have their payments go up, so rounding up each payment is the common practice — it also returns the money to the lender more quickly.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

Comments

72

This is normal (and has nothing to do with Python) because 8.83 cannot be represented exactly as a binary float, just as 1/3 cannot be represented exactly in decimal (0.333333... ad infinitum).

If you want to ensure absolute precision, you need the decimal module:

>>> import decimal >>> a = decimal.Decimal("8.833333333339") >>> print(round(a,2)) 8.83 

2 Comments

Not if you use the print function/statement (depending on your Python version).
>>> 106.00/12 => 8.833333333333334
25

You want to use the decimal module but you also need to specify the rounding mode. Here's an example:

>>> import decimal >>> decimal.Decimal('8.333333').quantize(decimal.Decimal('.01'), rounding=decimal.ROUND_UP) Decimal('8.34') >>> decimal.Decimal('8.333333').quantize(decimal.Decimal('.01'), rounding=decimal.ROUND_DOWN) Decimal('8.33') >>> 

1 Comment

Documentation for the decimal module: docs.python.org/3/library/decimal.html
16

A much simpler way is to simply use the round() function. Here is an example.

total_price = float() price_1 = 2.99 price_2 = 0.99 total_price = price_1 + price_2 

If you were to print out total_price right now you would get

3.9800000000000004 

But if you enclose it in a round() function like so

print(round(total_price,2)) 

The output equals

3.98 

The round() function works by accepting two parameters. The first is the number you want to round. The second is the number of decimal places to round to.

Comments

10

The easiest way to do this is by using the below function, which is built in:

format() 

For example:

format(1.242563,".2f") 

The output would be:

1.24 

Similarly:

format(9.165654,".1f") 

would give:

9.2 

1 Comment

The format answer was given in 2010 here. You could have updated that answer instead.
7

If you round 8.8333333333339 to 2 decimals, the correct answer is 8.83, not 8.84. The reason you got 8.83000000001 is because 8.83 is a number that cannot be correctly reprecented in binary, and it gives you the closest one. If you want to print it without all the zeros, do as VGE says:

print "%.2f" % 8.833333333339 #(Replace number with the variable?) 

Comments

6

If you want to round, 8.84 is the incorrect answer. 8.833333333333 rounded is 8.83 not 8.84. If you want to always round up, then you can use math.ceil. Do both in a combination with string formatting, because rounding a float number itself doesn't make sense.

"%.2f" % (math.ceil(x * 100) / 100) 

Comments

5

Just for the record. You could do it this way:

def roundno(no): return int(no//1 + ((no%1)/0.5)//1) 

There, no need for includes/imports

Comments

2

Use the decimal module: http://docs.python.org/library/decimal.html

ََََََ

1 Comment

>>> decimal.getcontext().prec = 3 >>> decimal.Decimal(106)/decimal.Decimal(12) Decimal('8.83') this is what I got, and not 8.84
2

Here is my solution for the round up/down problem

< .5 round down > = .5 round up 

import math def _should_round_down(val: float): if val < 0: return ((val * -1) % 1) < 0.5 return (val % 1) < 0.5 def _round(val: float, ndigits=0): if ndigits > 0: val *= 10 ** (ndigits - 1) is_positive = val > 0 tmp_val = val if not is_positive: tmp_val *= -1 rounded_value = math.floor(tmp_val) if _should_round_down(val) else math.ceil(tmp_val) if not is_positive: rounded_value *= -1 if ndigits > 0: rounded_value /= 10 ** (ndigits - 1) return rounded_value # test # nr = 12.2548 # for digit in range(0, 4): # print("{} decimals : {} -> {}".format(digit, nr, _round(nr, digit))) # output # 0 decimals : 12.2548 -> 12 # 1 decimals : 12.2548 -> 12.0 # 2 decimals : 12.2548 -> 12.3 # 3 decimals : 12.2548 -> 12.25 

Comments

1

I have this code:

tax = (tax / 100) * price 

and then this code:

tax = round((tax / 100) * price, 2) 

round worked for me

1 Comment

You solved my problem. I could only round with this. Nothing else worked. renewal_percentage=round(df_x_renewal_count/df_all_count*100)
0

Here is a simple function to do this for you:

def precision(num,x): return "{0:.xf}".format(round(num)) 

Here, num is the decimal number. x is the decimal up to where you want to round a floating number.

The advantage over other implementation is that it can fill zeros at the right end of the decimal to make a deciaml number up to x decimal places.

Example 1:

precision(10.2, 9) 

will return

10.200000000 (up to 9 decimal points)

Example 2:

precision(10.2231, 2) 

will return

10.22 (up to two decimal points)

Comments

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.