To do this sort of thing properly, you will need a parser. You can create your own: parsing algorithms are well-documented. However, you don't need to build a parser from scratch, you can use a package like pyparsing to create a parser.
If you can guarantee that your user input is totally safe, then you can get Python to evaluate it for you via the built-in eval
function. However, eval
is slow, and it is a security hole because it can be used to execute arbitrary code, as mentioned in the article by Ned Batchelder that's linked in Ofer Sadan's answer.
But to answer your immediate question, we can easily grab the digits from that list of strings, join them together, and convert the resulting number strings into integers. Grouping the digits and separating them from the non-digits is easily done using itertools.groupby
. You just need to give it a function it can use to identify the groups; we can use str.isdigit
for that. Here's a short demo:
from itertools import groupby
lst = ['(' ,'1', '+', '2', ')', '+', '(', '2', '0', '0', '/', '2', '5', ')']
a = [int(''.join(g)) if k else next(g) for k, g in groupby(lst, str.isdigit)]
print(a)
output
['(', 1, '+', 2, ')', 200, '/', 25, ')']
If you also want to handle +
and -
signs and decimal points, it's not too hard to write a function that does that. Proper handling of all floating-point numbers is a little trickier, and it's possibly better to use a parser that already knows how to do that. ;)