5

Is there a way in Python to cat a string and a function?

For example

def myFunction():
    a=(str(local_time[0]))
    return a

b="MyFunction"+myFunction

I get an error that I cannot concatenate a 'str' and 'function' object.

2

3 Answers 3

15

There are two possibilities:

If you are looking for the return value of myfunction, then:

print 'function: ' + myfunction() 

If you are looking for the name of myfunction then:

print 'function: ' + myfunction.__name__ 
2
  • I want to cll the function like b="MyFunction"+myFunction(), sorry, I missed the () above. I am used to C++. I want to run the function in the statement declaring b, is that possible? I can do it if I run myFunction() outside of declaring b but I want to do it during that declaration, is it possible in python? Apr 19, 2013 at 12:29
  • Calling the function will return a string. See the code here: ideone.com/UCUMgO.
    – aldeb
    Apr 19, 2013 at 12:50
3

You need to call your function so that it actually returns the value you are looking for:

b="MyFunction"+myFunction()
2
  • When I do that I ger the error that I cannot concatenate a 'str' and 'function' object. Apr 19, 2013 at 12:31
  • @user2295959, it worked for me... Did you notice the parenthesis?
    – mjgpy3
    Apr 19, 2013 at 12:48
-1

You can use

var= "string" + str(function())

example

a="this is best"
s="number of chars. in a " + str(len(a))
print(s)

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