Python Poetry (why indentation?)
Jaap Spies
j.spies at hccnet.nl
Wed Feb 2 17:55:49 EST 2000
# Contribution to the forever lasting discussion on indentation!
# After Petrarca, Shakespeare, Milton, Drs. P and many, many others,
# a sonnet has 14 lines and a certain rhyme scheme.
# Jacques Bens presented in 1965 in Paris the pi-sonnet with
# 3,1,4,1 and 5 lines, but the ultimate pi-poem I found in
# Brown's Python Annotated Archives p. 12:
# Based on a algorithm of Lambert Meertens (remember those days of the
# B -> ABC-programming language!!!)
import sys
def main():
k, a, b, a1, b1 = 2L, 4L, 1L, 12L, 4L
while 1:
p, q, k = k*k, 2L*k+1L, k+1L
a, b, a1, b1 = a1, b1, p*a+q*a1, p*b+q*b1
d, d1 = a/b, a1/b1
while d == d1:
output(d)
a, a1 = 10L*(a%b), 10L*(a1%b1)
d, d1 = a/b, a1/b1
def output(d):
sys.stdout.write(`int(d)`)
sys.stdout.flush()
main()
# Reading/writing Python source often gives me the impression of
# reading/writing a poem!
# Layout, indentation, rythm, I like the look and feel!
# What does this tiny program do? It is not a sonnet, even not a
# pi-sonnet, but it surely produces Pi!
# The poem ( sorry, the program) needs some explanation.
# As a mathematician I recognize the continued fraction, odd/even,
# squares and all that matters.
# But it is a miracle! A few lines of Python code producing
# a infinity of pi-digits!
# Jaap Spies
# Hogeschool Drenthe
# Keep Peace in Mind
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