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I have a string in the format: 'nn.nnnnn' in Python, and I'd like to convert it to an integer.

Direct conversion fails:

>>> s = '23.45678'
>>> i = int(s)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: '23.45678'

I can convert it to a decimal by using:

>>> from decimal import *
>>> d = Decimal(s)
>>> print d
23.45678

I could also split on '.', then subtract the decimal from zero, then add that to the whole number ... yuck.

But I'd prefer to have it as an int, without unnecessary type conversions or maneuvering.

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5  
Matt, 23.45678 isn't an integer. If you want Python to convert a string to an integer, make sure that you give it an integer. Arguments can be made either way about what the "right" thing is, and in the end someone is going to be unhappy. – Christopher Jul 7 at 20:49

7 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

How about this?

>>> s = '23.45678'
>>> int(float(s))
23

Or...

>>> int(Decimal(s))
23

Or...

>>> int(s.split('.')[0])
23

I doubt it's going to get much simpler than that, I'm afraid. Just accept it and move on.

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vote up 0 vote down

You could use:

  >>> s = '23.245678'
  >>> i = int(float(s))
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vote up 3 vote down

What sort of rounding behavior do you want? Do you 2.67 to turn into 3, or 2. If you want to use rounding, try this:

s = '234.67'
i = int(round(float(s)))

Otherwise, just do:

s = '234.67'
i = int(float(s))
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vote up 1 vote down

"Convert" only makes sense when you change from one data type to another without loss of fidelity. The number represented by the string is a float and will lose precision upon being forced into an int.

You want to round instead, probably (I hope that the numbers don't represent currency because then rounding gets a whole lot more complicated).

round(float('23.45678'))
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vote up 0 vote down
>>> s = '23.45678'
>>> int(float(s))
23
>>> int(round(float(s)))
23
>>> s = '23.54678'
>>> int(float(s))
23
>>> int(round(float(s)))
24

You don't specify if you want rounding or not...

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vote up 0 vote down
round(float("123.789"))

will give you an integer value, but a float type. With Python's duck typing, however, the actual type is usually not very relevant. This will also round the value, which you might not want. Replace 'round' with 'int' and you'll have it just truncated and an actual int. Like this:

int(float("123.789"))

But, again, actual 'type' is usually not that important.

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vote up 0 vote down

The expression int(float(s)) mentioned by others is the best if you want to truncate the value. If you want rounding, using int(round(float(s)) if the round algorithm matches what you want (see the round documentation), otherwise you should use Decimal and one if its rounding algorithms.

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