As the other answers have mentioned, the int
operation will crash if the string input is not convertible to an int (such as a float or characters). What you can do is use a little helper method to try and interpret the string for you:
def interpret_string(s):
if not isinstance(s, basestring):
return str(s)
if s.isdigit():
return int(s)
try:
return float(s)
except ValueError:
return s
So it will take a string and try to convert it to int, then float, and otherwise return string. This is more just a general example of looking at the convertible types. It would be an error for your value to come back out of that function still being a string, which you would then want to report to the user and ask for new input.
Maybe a variation that returns None
if its neither float nor int:
def interpret_string(s):
if not isinstance(s, basestring):
return None
if s.isdigit():
return int(s)
try:
return float(s)
except ValueError:
return None
val=raw_input("> ")
how_much=interpret_string(val)
if how_much is None:
# ask for more input? Error?
how_much = int(float(...))
orhow_much = int(round(float(...)))
.next
is not a good choice for a var name, as there is a build in functionnext()
since 2.6 in python