When I am checking with data types I wonder why a char value is returning as string type.
Please see my input and output.
Input:
a = 'c'
type(a)
Output:
class 'str'
When I am checking with data types I wonder why a char value is returning as string type.
Please see my input and output.
Input:
a = 'c'
type(a)
Output:
class 'str'
No.
Python does not have a character or char
type. All single characters are strings with length one.
There is no built-in type for character in Python, there are int
, str
and bytes
. If you intend to user character, you just can go with str
of length 1.
Note that Python is dynamically typed, you do not need to declare type of your variables.
All string you create using quote '
, double quote "
and triple quote """
are string (unicode):
type("x")
str
When invoking built-in function type
, it returns a type
object representing the type of your variable:
type(type("x"))
type
Integer and character do have mapping function (encoding), natively the sober map is ASCII, see chr
and ord
builti-in functions.
type(123)
int
type(chr(65))
str
type(ord("x"))
int
If you must handle special characters that are not available in default charset, you will have to consider encoding:
x = "é".encode()
b'\xc3\xa9'
The function encode, convert your sting into bytes and can be decoded back:
x.decode()
'é'
Method encode
and decode
belongs respectively to object str
and bytes
.
type
return str
? @collector answered simply, which I think reflected the level of expertise of the asker. You provided a more detailed response more appropriate for a different asker. Had you stopped at your first line your answer would have been upvoted.
Mar 9, 2020 at 17:06
1 + "2" == 3
.
There is a bytes type which may be analogous depending on why you are asking.
>>> b'a'
=> b'a'
https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.0.html#text-vs-data-instead-of-unicode-vs-8-bit