The power operator binds more tightly than unary operators on its left; it binds less tightly than unary operators on its right. The syntax is:
Thus, in an unparenthesized sequence of power and unary operators, the operators are evaluated from right to left (this does not constrain the evaluation order for the operands).
The power operator has the same semantics as the built-in pow() function, when called with two arguments: it yields its left argument raised to the power of its right argument. The numeric arguments are first converted to a common type. The result type is that of the arguments after coercion.
With mixed operand types, the coercion rules for binary arithmetic
operators apply. For int and long int operands, the result has the
same type as the operands (after coercion) unless the second argument
is negative; in that case, all arguments are converted to float and a
float result is delivered. For example, 10**2
returns 100
,
but 10**-2
returns 0.01
. (This last feature was added in
Python 2.2. In Python 2.1 and before, if both arguments were of integer
types and the second argument was negative, an exception was raised).
Raising 0.0
to a negative power results in a
ZeroDivisionError. Raising a negative number to a
fractional power results in a ValueError.
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