> On Mar 12, 2018, at 12:15 PM, Guido van Rossum <guido at python.org> wrote: > > There's a reason why adding this to int feels right to me. In mypy we treat int as a sub*type* of float, even though technically it isn't a sub*class*. The absence of an is_integer() method on int means that this code has a bug that mypy doesn't catch: > > def f(x: float): > if x.is_integer(): > "do something" > else: > "do something else" > > f(12) Do you have any thoughts about the other non-corresponding float methods? >>> set(dir(float)) - set(dir(int)) {'as_integer_ratio', 'hex', '__getformat__', 'is_integer', '__setformat__', 'fromhex'} In general, would you prefer that functionality like is_integer() be a math module function or that is should be a method on all numeric types except Complex? I expect questions like this to recur over time. Also, do you have any thoughts on the feature itself? Serhiy ran a Github search and found that it was baiting people into worrisome code like: (x/5).is_integer() or (x**0.5).is_integer() > So I think the OP of the bug has a valid point, 27 years without this feature notwithstanding. Okay, I'll ask the OP to update his patch :-) Raymond
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