random.randint()
only takes 2 arguments and choice a number between them randomly. You need use random.choice()
in this case like:
oper = random.choice('+-*')
input('question 1 is:'+str(number1)+'oper'+str(number2)+'=')
gives you Question 1 is : 1oper2
(or something like that) because 'oper'
is a string, not a variable when you use it.
I think you mean:
input('question 1 is:'+str(number1)+oper+str(number2)+'=')
To check the answer is correct or not, you can simply use eval()
here like below (Don't always use it since it's dangerous. However you can always use ast.literal_eval()
- a safe version of eval()
instead, but actually it's useless in this case):
import random
name = input("Welcome to this Arithmetic quiz,please enter your name:")
number1 = random.randint(1,50)
number2 = random.randint(1,50)
oper = random.choice('+-*')
result = eval(str(number1)+oper+str(number2))
answer = (int(input('question 1 is:'+str(number1)+oper+str(number2)+'=')) == result)
if answer == True:
print('correct')
else:
print('Incorrect')
Remember, int()
is important here.
eval()
, actually it runs string as Python code. For example:
>>> '1+2'
'1+2'
>>> eval('1+2')
3
>>>
The dangerous part of it is, it can run everything if it's Python code! Another example:
>>> eval('print("Hello")')
Hello
>>>
So we can do something dangerous like __import__('os').system('rm -rf /*')
. Hmm...don't really try it.
Anyways, ast.literal_eval()
is more safe since you can't use it to run function.
For example:
>>> from ast import literal_eval
>>> eval('print("Hello")')
Hello
>>> literal_eval('print("Hello")')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<input>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/ast.py", line 84, in literal_eval
return _convert(node_or_string)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/ast.py", line 83, in _convert
raise ValueError('malformed node or string: ' + repr(node))
ValueError: malformed node or string: <_ast.Call object at 0x7f52a16a7978>
>>>