changing numbers to spellings
Paul Rubin
http
Wed Oct 4 11:58:49 EDT 2006
Steve Holden <steve at holdenweb.com> writes:
> You should get some clue about the number conversion (not to menion a
> bunch of code you can lift :) from
>
> http://www.python.org/pycon/dc2004/papers/42/ex1-C/num2eng.py
For some reason I felt like writing another one, that doesn't use as
much recursion as the last one I posted. This one is more like
old-fashioned Python and is shorter, but took several refactorings
and was harder to debug:
def spell(n, d=0):
# spell arbitrary integer n, restricted to |n| < 10**66
assert abs(n) < 10**66
if n == 0: return 'zero'
if n < 0: return 'minus ' + spell(-n, d)
bigtab = ('thousand', 'million', 'billion', 'trillion',
'quadrillion', 'quintillion', 'sextillion', 'septillion',
'octillion', 'nonillion', 'decillion', 'undecillion',
'duodecillion', 'tredecillion', 'quattuordecillion',
'quinquadecillion', 'sextemdecillion', 'septemdecillion',
'octodecillion', 'novemdecillion', 'vigintillion')
smalltab = ('', 'one', 'two', 'three', 'four',
'five', 'six', 'seven', 'eight', 'nine',
'ten', 'eleven', 'twelve', 'thirteen', 'fourteen',
'fifteen', 'sixteen', 'seventeen', 'eighteen', 'nineteen')
out = []
def maybe(cond,s): return (cond and s) or ''
a,n = divmod(n, 1000)
if a:
out.extend((spell(a,d+1), maybe(a % 1000, bigtab[d])))
a,n = divmod(n, 100)
out.append(maybe(a, '%s hundred'% spell(a)))
a,b = divmod(n, 10)
if a > 1:
out.append(('twenty', 'thirty', 'forty', 'fifty', 'sixty',
'seventy', 'eighty', 'ninety')[a-2] +
maybe(b, '-' + smalltab[b]))
else:
out.append(smalltab[n])
return (' '.join(filter(bool, out)))
# example
print spell(9**69)
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