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I am trying to make a code that can calculate Pythagoras Theorem formulas for me, but I am having trouble adding the answers from my 'raw_input()'s into an equation to add them together. I'm doing something wrong but i'm not quite sure what... PLEASE HELP!

need = raw_input("What do you need to Use?")

if need == "pythagoras" or "Pythagoras":
    pythagoras = raw_input("What side do you Need?")

if pythagoras == "hypotenuse" or "Hypotenuse":
    k1 = raw_input("Known Side 1")
    k2 = raw_input("Known Side 2")
    print eval('str(k1) + str(k2)')
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  • What have you tried? You should always include sample code where you have some so we can see where you're going wrong.
    – James
    Jun 14, 2013 at 11:37
  • Please post your current code, we are not clairvoyants
    – YXD
    Jun 14, 2013 at 11:37
  • 6
    Usually it's an error on line 3, in my experience. Jun 14, 2013 at 11:37
  • iv'e added my code so far Jun 14, 2013 at 11:39
  • 1
    This is wrong on so many ... lines
    – mishik
    Jun 14, 2013 at 11:39

2 Answers 2

2

You should use int() or float() to convert the input numbers from the user to integers/floats and then apply the formula to them.

need == "pythagoras" or "Pythagoras" is equivalent to :

(need == "pythagoras") or "Pythagoras" so if need equals "pythagoras" then this returns True else return "Pythagoras"(i.e a True value), in other words your if conditions are always True no matter what the input is.

Working code:

need = raw_input("What do you need to Use?")
#use a while loop loop, this will continuously ask for the user input
#until he doesn't enters a corrects one.
while need.lower() != "pythagoras":  
    print "Invalid choice! try again"
    need = raw_input("What do you need to Use?")

pythagoras = raw_input("What side do you Need?")

if pythagoras.lower() == "hypotenuse":
    k1 = int(raw_input("Known Side 1: ")) #use int() to convert the user input to integers
    k2 = int(raw_input("Known Side 2: ")) # use float() if you want floats
    print (k1**2 + k2**2)**0.5            # now apply the formula
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  • need.lower() == "hypotenuse" would be better. Also need.lower() != "pythagoras" Jun 14, 2013 at 11:48
  • @AnkurAnkan good point, fixed that. Jun 14, 2013 at 11:53
1

You have a couple of problems:

  • or isn't working as you expect it to be. In python, you need to say if need == "pythagoras" or need == 'Pythagoras'. This is the same for your second if-statement.

  • Using eval() is a bad idea. Your result can easily be obtained without it:

    str(k1) + str(k2)
    

However, raw_input() returns a string, which (I'm presuming) you want to convert into an integer. You can do this with the int() function:

k1 = int(raw_input("Known Side 1"))
k2 = int(raw_input("Known Side 2"))

Now the input will be an integer and not a string.

Also, you can simply just do if need.lower() == 'pythagoras' and if pythagoras.lower() == 'hypotenuse' for your if-statements.

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  • @RossGibson Actually, looking at your code, my previous solution was not 100% correct
    – TerryA
    Jun 14, 2013 at 11:40
  • sory, im having trouble finding out where i need to use this 'int()' stuff. Jun 14, 2013 at 11:44
  • @RossGibson When you put in an input for raw_input(), the result is a string. If you do '34' + '36', you get '3436', because they are strings, and that is what strings do when you attempt to add them. To actually get a result of 70 (34 + 36), you need to convert the strings to integers, and then you can do 34 + 36. To do this, you can use the int() function
    – TerryA
    Jun 14, 2013 at 11:46
  • thank you so much Haidro! it completely fixed it! Jun 14, 2013 at 11:51
  • just one last thing, both integer's need to be squared to work out the equation... how do i do this? Jun 14, 2013 at 11:59

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