I'm trying to write a function that allows me to convert a number from a certain positional notation to another one of choice, from binary all the way to *hexa*trigesimal base numbers. In order to do so I first need to be able to convert my initial number (given as a string) to a decimal number to make further conversion easier.
However, my function appears to have a mistake.
What I have:
def decimal(number, base1):
number_dec = 0
val = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'
if base1 != 10:
for digit in number[::-1]:
factor = val.find(digit)
for exp in range(0, len(number)):
number_dec += factor * base1 **exp
else:
number_dec = number
return number_dec
If I enter, for instance:
decimal('4d2', 16)
The function returns '5187' instead of the correct '1234'.
Where is the mistake?
int
function already does this:int('4d2', 16)
returns1234
, andint('4x3', 36)
returns6375
. (It only works up to base 36, but then the same is true of your code, and if "pentatrigesimal" is the limit of what you need, you're done.) Also, it works with capital letters as well as lowercase.base1 != 10
, but a string if it is. That's probably not what you wanted, is it?int
."