print(f"PearsonR Corr Coefficient {%0.3f} {pearsonr_coefficient}")
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jonrsharpe
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Anmol Katare
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2*What* error? Give a [mre]. – jonrsharpe Mar 30 '20 at 14:41
3 Answers
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With f-strings you have to specify the format in a different way:
print(f"PearsonR Corr Coefficient {pearsonr_coefficient:0.3f}")
Refer to this guide if you have more doubts.

UJIN
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Try this:
pearsonr_coefficient = 1.0545
print(f"PearsonR Corr Coefficient {pearsonr_coefficient:0.3f}")
# PearsonR Corr Coefficient 1.054
see this answer
The trick is here : :0.3f Please check the python documentation with examples

Eric Frigade
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print(f"PearsonR Corr Coefficient {pearsonr_coefficient:0.3f}")

wang..lee
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1Welcome to SO! You may want to explain why your answer resolves the question. Generally speaking answers that provide a solution to the question while also explaining the solution tend to score higher than those that simply provide a solution. Linking in relevant documentation also is a big help! Thanks for contributing! – Frito Mar 30 '20 at 15:16
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https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer Here's some additional information on crafting an answer since I ran out of characters above :-) – Frito Mar 30 '20 at 15:17