How can I change any data type into a string in Python?
myvariable = 4
mystring = str(myvariable) # '4'
also, alternatively try repr:
mystring = repr(myvariable) # '4'
This is called "conversion" in python, and is quite common.
-
5I wouldn't use repr(myvariable) - it often returns information about class type, memory address etc. It's more useful for debugging. Use str(myvariable) for conversion to string and unicode(variable) for conversion to unicode. – Abgan Jul 8 '10 at 14:29
-
-
1What about unicode? Something like
str(u'ä')
will not work. Howeverrepr(u'ä')
will work. – Rouven B. Oct 10 '16 at 9:23
str
is meant to produce a string representation of the object's data. If you're writing your own class and you want str
to work for you, add:
def __str__(self):
return "Some descriptive string"
print str(myObj)
will call myObj.__str__()
.
repr
is a similar method, which generally produces information on the class info. For most core library object, repr
produces the class name (and sometime some class information) between angle brackets. repr
will be used, for example, by just typing your object into your interactions pane, without using print
or anything else.
You can define the behavior of repr
for your own objects just like you can define the behavior of str
:
def __repr__(self):
return "Some descriptive string"
>>> myObj
in your interactions pane, or repr(myObj)
, will result in myObj.__repr__()
-
It's probably true that the majority of core library objects by raw percentage return the
object.__repr__
-style angle-bracket representation, but many of the most commonly used ones do not. The rule of thumb forrepr
is that if it makes sense to return Python code that could be evaluated to produce the same object, do that, just likestr
,frozenset
, and most other builtins do, but if it doesn't, use the angle-bracket form to make sure that what you return can't possibly be mistaken for a human-readable-and-evaluatable-as-source repr. – abarnert Mar 21 '18 at 17:09 -
(Of course some of the builtins violate that rule of thumb—a
list
that includes itself returns something that not only looks like but is evaluable code, which evaluates to the wrong thing—but the core devs have never taken that as license to expand the same behavior into the stdlib.) – abarnert Mar 21 '18 at 17:10
I see all answers recommend using str(object)
. It might fail if your object have more than ascii characters and you will see error like ordinal not in range(128)
. This was the case for me while I was converting list of string in language other than English
I resolved it by using unicode(object)
-
5
Use the str
built-in:
x = str(something)
Examples:
>>> str(1)
'1'
>>> str(1.0)
'1.0'
>>> str([])
'[]'
>>> str({})
'{}'
...
From the documentation:
Return a string containing a nicely printable representation of an object. For strings, this returns the string itself. The difference with repr(object) is that str(object) does not always attempt to return a string that is acceptable to eval(); its goal is to return a printable string. If no argument is given, returns the empty string, ''.
str(object)
will do the trick.
If you want to alter the way object is stringified, define __str__(self)
method for object's class. Such method has to return str or unicode object.
-
-
@Kedar.Aitawdekar: Even if there is noticeable difference in execution time (which I doubt, but I encourage you to vefiry it using
timeit
module), you should usestr(any_var)
since it's more readable for human and allows to benefit from cases whenany_var
defines__repr__()
but doesn't define__str__()
. – Abgan Oct 11 '16 at 15:22 -
With str(x)
. However, every data type can define its own string conversion, so this might not be what you want.
-
3This is an important yet rare consideration. Good that you mentioned it. – jathanism Jul 8 '10 at 15:51
Use formatting:
"%s" % (x)
Example:
x = time.ctime(); str = "%s" % (x); print str
Output: Thu Jan 11 20:40:05 2018
str(var)
? is that what you're looking for? – SilentGhost Jul 8 '10 at 14:27