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So i have a program called lonesum(a,b,c) that needs to add the 3 numbers entered together only if they are input once. so lonesum(1,2,3) would return 6 but lonesum(1,1,3) would return 3. I have that part. What i need help with is getting a statement to work that will return an error if the user enters anything that isn't an integer i.e. lonesum(.5,2,3) will return error. so far i have this while statement which i thought would work but doesn't,:

while (a,b,c) != int:
     print("Error")
     return None
while a==b==c:
    return 0
while a==b:
    return c
while b==c:
    return a
while a==c:
    return b
while a!=b!=c:
    sum1=(a+b+c)
    return sum1

(That is the rest of my code, that is the part that works)

My problem is the != doesn't work and I'm not sure what to do. Any suggestions?

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  • 5
    What are you trying to achieve by using (a,b,c) != int:? What do you think this condition examines? Nov 4, 2016 at 20:07
  • the (a,b,c) is the input from when you run the lonesum(a,b,c) function. I was hoping that putting while (a,b,c), the input, != int, (an integer) that it would print error and return none. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:11
  • 1
    Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't the print missing a double quote? Nov 4, 2016 at 20:12
  • 5
    A while that always returns on the first iteration is an if
    – Will
    Nov 4, 2016 at 20:12
  • (a,b,c) is creating a tuple. And the comparison is just wrong, even something like 1 == int will return False Nov 4, 2016 at 20:14

2 Answers 2

3

Try something like this:

if not all(type(v) is int for v in (a, b, c)):
    print("Error!")
    return None

What you want to check is if each value in (a, b, c) is of integer type. So you must check each value, not the tuple itself.

The builtin function all iterates over something iterable and returns true if all of the values are true. I've created a generator expression that iterates over the tuple (a, b, c), comparing the type of each value to int. all iterates over that generator expression. So if all of the values in (a, b, c) have type int, it returns True.

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    That works! thank you! If i can ask, do you think you could explain why it works so that i can understand it more? I'm still in the process of learning python and as nice as my professor is, she isn't very good at explaing things. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:20
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    @ConorHastings: Read the docs for all and the generator expression tutorial; that covers both of the components here. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:25
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    Side-note: Specific type checking is usually a bad idea, since it makes your code not work with anything but int, even if it's logically integer data (e.g. numpy integer types, gmpy2.mpz, long on Python 2, etc.). That's why duck typing is encouraged, or failing that, checking a more generic abstract type with isinstance, e.g. in this case, all(isinstance(v, numbers.Integral) for v in (a, b, c)). Nov 4, 2016 at 20:27
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    @ConorHastings: I applaud you for asking for a better explanation. It's encouraging that you're interested in learning, not just getting your assignment done. And it keeps me honest -- I got a bit lazy. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:31
  • You should probably also look at the Python Tutorial located at the main Python site, @ConorHastings. Here's a link for that. After that try looking through Q&A's here on StackOverflow, there's a ton of amazing content by great people. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:34
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If you want the sum of all numbers that appear exactly once, there are more succinct ways to do it. Count them all, sum the ones that appear once:

from collections import Counter

def lonesum(a, b, c):
    counts = Counter((a, b, c))
    return sum(v for v, cnt in counts.items() if cnt == 1)

This implicitly raises an error if a non-numeric value is passed as an argument when it tries to sum them; if you want to print an error instead of propagating the exception, make it:

def lonesum(a, b, c):
    try:
        counts = Counter((a, b, c))
        return sum(v for v, cnt in counts.items() if cnt == 1)
    except TypeError:
        print("Error!")
        return None
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  • I know what i have is not ideal. But like i said, we haven't even learned how to do stuff like that yet. Nov 4, 2016 at 20:22

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