2

I am trying to only allow some input in python using the following code

while True:
    age=input('Are you 1,2 OR 3')
    if age== ('1' or '2' or '3'):
        break
    else:
        print('df')

When I enter 1, no error comes up and it continues to the rest of the programme, however when I enter 2 or 3, it comes up with the else: error. I've tried changing it round a bit and it seems as though it only accepts the first number from the choices (1). Probably a very simple fix. Thanks for any help.

1
  • I've closed as the dupe that I think you're ultimately asking for (type conversion and 2.x/3.x checking etc...)... but see stackoverflow.com/questions/15112125/… as to how to correctly test against multiple values in general Mar 22, 2015 at 23:12

2 Answers 2

3

You need to change age checking with:

if age in ('1', '2', '3'):

'1' or '2' or '3' is a boolean expression that returns the first non empty string. And in this case the string is '1'.

For example:

>>> '1' or '2' or '3'
'1'
>>> '' or '2' or '3'
'2'
2
  • @aruisdante, True is not the chained or result as shown above. Also, from the syntax the OP is probably using Python 3, so input would be returning a string. Mar 22, 2015 at 23:17
  • Whoops, you're right, didn't think that one through all the way ;) Though nothing syntactically there screams 3, function-print is in 2.7. But yes, given that the chained or would in fact return '1', almost certainly 3.
    – aruisdante
    Mar 22, 2015 at 23:19
0

You cannot join comparisons like that. You can:

if age == '1' or age == '2' or age == '3':

or use the in operator as JuniorCompressor suggested.

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