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A rational number can be represented as a paired integer number; a/b (b>0). Where a is numerator and b is denominator. Integer a equals rational a/1 mathematically.
In ruby, you can create rational object with Rational or to_r method. The return values will be irreducible.
Rational(1) #=> (1/1) Rational(2, 3) #=> (2/3) Rational(4, -6) #=> (-2/3) 3.to_r #=> (3/1)
You can also create rational object from floating-point numbers or strings.
Rational(0.3) #=> (5404319552844595/18014398509481984) Rational('0.3') #=> (3/10) Rational('2/3') #=> (2/3) 0.3.to_r #=> (5404319552844595/18014398509481984) '0.3'.to_r #=> (3/10) '2/3'.to_r #=> (2/3)
A rational object is an exact number, which helps you to write program without any rounding errors.
10.times.inject(0){|t,| t + 0.1} #=> 0.9999999999999999 10.times.inject(0){|t,| t + Rational('0.1')} #=> (1/1)
However, when an expression has inexact factor (numerical value or operation), will produce an inexact result.
Rational(10) / 3 #=> (10/3) Rational(10) / 3.0 #=> 3.3333333333333335 Rational(-8) ** Rational(1, 3) #=> (1.0000000000000002+1.7320508075688772i)