102

I have a string that represents a number which uses commas to separate thousands. How can I convert this to a number in python?

>>> int("1,000,000")

Generates a ValueError.

I could replace the commas with empty strings before I try to convert it, but that feels wrong somehow. Is there a better way?


For float values, see How can I convert a string with dot and comma into a float in Python, although the techniques are essentially the same.

1
  • 1
    No, that's the most pythonic solution. int("1,000,000".replace(',', ''))
    – MogaGennis
    Apr 27, 2021 at 23:28

11 Answers 11

122
import locale
locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8' ) 
locale.atoi('1,000,000')
# 1000000
locale.atof('1,000,000.53')
# 1000000.53
10
  • 1
    I think the guru means something like this: locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8')
    – mbarkhau
    Nov 22, 2009 at 17:40
  • Very nice. This way I can handle european numbers where the commas and points are switched too. Thanks.
    – dsimard
    Nov 22, 2009 at 18:39
  • 7
    I get locale error: Traceback (most recent call last): File "F:\test\locale_num.py", line 2, in <module> locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8' ) File "F:\Python27\lib\locale.py", line 539, in setlocale return _setlocale(category, locale) locale.Error: unsupported locale setting Oct 5, 2012 at 12:06
  • @TonyVeijalainen: On linux you can use locale -a to find what locales are available on your system. For Windows, try this SO answer.
    – unutbu
    Oct 5, 2012 at 18:51
  • Where did you find out that it was 'en_US.UTF-8'? (It's correct - I just want to know for future reference.) It doesn't show up in a Google search of the python.org website, nor is there any list on the locale doc page: docs.python.org/2/library/locale.html EDIT: I see that you can find the locales with locale -a... so the interpreter gets the information about locales from the OS itself? May 11, 2014 at 20:38
47

There are several ways to parse numbers with thousands separators. And I doubt that the way described by @unutbu is the best in all cases. That's why I list other ways too.

  1. The proper place to call setlocale() is in __main__ module. It's global setting and will affect the whole program and even C extensions (although note that LC_NUMERIC setting is not set at system level, but is emulated by Python). Read caveats in documentation and think twice before going this way. It's probably OK in single application, but never use it in libraries for wide audience. Probably you shoud avoid requesting locale with some particular charset encoding, since it might not be available on some systems.

  2. Use one of third party libraries for internationalization. For example PyICU allows using any available locale wihtout affecting the whole process (and even parsing numbers with particular thousands separators without using locales):

    NumberFormat.createInstance(Locale('en_US')).parse("1,000,000").getLong()

  3. Write your own parsing function, if you don't what to install third party libraries to do it "right way". It can be as simple as int(data.replace(',', '')) when strict validation is not needed.

3
  • 1
    +1 for recommending the simple way. That's all I needed when I had this same problem. Jul 11, 2011 at 14:21
  • Edited to fix a typo (setlocate should be setlocale). Also, +1. Apr 28, 2014 at 15:31
  • Shameless self-promotion, I did use the third option. So if someone is interested, have a look at this question/answer
    – Jan
    Feb 17, 2018 at 20:11
20

Replace the commas with empty strings, and turn the resulting string into an int or a float.

>>> a = '1,000,000'
>>> int(a.replace(',' , ''))
1000000
>>> float(a.replace(',' , ''))
1000000.0
1
  • 23
    Please, read again the OP question. In particular where he says: "I could replace the commas with empty strings before I try to convert it, but that feels wrong somehow. Is there a better way?"
    – joaquin
    Mar 27, 2014 at 12:23
3

I got locale error from accepted answer, but the following change works here in Finland (Windows XP):

import locale
locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, 'english_USA' )
print locale.atoi('1,000,000')
# 1000000
print locale.atof('1,000,000.53')
# 1000000.53
3

This works:

(A dirty but quick way)

>>> a='-1,234,567,89.0123'
>>> "".join(a.split(","))
'-123456789.0123'
1

I tried this. It goes a bit beyond the question: You get an input. It will be converted to string first (if it is a list, for example from Beautiful soup); then to int, then to float.

It goes as far as it can get. In worst case, it returns everything unconverted as string.

def to_normal(soupCell):
    ''' converts a html cell from beautiful soup to text, then to int, then to float: as far as it gets.
    US thousands separators are taken into account.
    needs import locale'''
    
    locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, 'english_USA' ) 

    output = unicode(soupCell.findAll(text=True)[0].string)
    try: 
        return locale.atoi(output)
    except ValueError: 
        try: return locale.atof(output)
        except ValueError:
            return output
0
>>> import locale
>>> locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, "")
'en_US.UTF-8'
>>> print locale.atoi('1,000,000')
1000000
>>> print locale.atof('1,000,000.53')
1000000.53

this is done on Linux in US.

0

A little late, but the babel library has parse_decimal and parse_number which do exactly what you want:

from babel.numbers import parse_decimal, parse_number
parse_decimal('10,3453', locale='es_ES')
>>> Decimal('10.3453')
parse_number('20.457', locale='es_ES')
>>> 20457
parse_decimal('10,3453', locale='es_MX')
>>> Decimal('103453')

You can also pass a Locale class instead of a string:

from babel import Locale
parse_decimal('10,3453', locale=Locale('es_MX'))
>>> Decimal('103453')
0

If you're using pandas and you're trying to parse a CSV that includes numbers with a comma for thousands separators, you can just pass the keyword argument thousands=',' like so:

df = pd.read_csv('your_file.csv', thousands=',')
0

Not the shortest solution, but for the sake of completeness and maybe interesting if you want to rely on an existing function that has been proven a million times: you can leverage pandas by injecting your number as StringIO to its read_csv() function (it has a C backend, so the conversion functionality cannot be leveraged directly - as far as I know).

>>> float(pd.read_csv(StringIO("1,000.23"), sep=";", thousands=",", header=None)[0])
1000.23
-1

Try this:

def changenum(data):
    foo = ""
    for i in list(data):
        if i == ",":
            continue
        else:
            foo += i
    return  float(int(foo))
1
  • 2
    Some explanation to go with that code? A bowl of soup is usually served with a soup spoon
    – cs95
    Jan 16, 2019 at 3:53

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