115
  • I decided to make some kind of secret code for testing purposes with Unicode.
  • I've done that by adding numbers to Unicode so it would be kind of secret.
  • I've been getting this error, but I don't know how to solve it.
    • Is there any solution?

Original Code

message = input("Enter a message you want to be revealed: ")
secret_string = ""
for char in message:
    secret_string += str(chr(char + 7429146))
print("Revealed", secret_string)
q = input("")

Original Error

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TypeError                                 Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-182-49ece294a581> in <module>
      2 secret_string = ""
      3 for char in message:
----> 4     secret_string += str(chr(char + 7429146))
      5 print("Revealed", secret_string)
      6 q = input("")

TypeError: can only concatenate str (not "int") to str

Updated code

while True:
    try:
        message = int(input("Enter a message you want to be decrypt: "))
        break
    except ValueError:
        print("Error, it must be an integer")
secret_string = ""
for char in message:
    secret_string += chr(ord(char - str(742146)))
print("Decrypted", secret_string)
q = input("")
0

6 Answers 6

162

Python working a bit differently to JavaScript for example, the value you are concatenating needs to be same type, both int or str...

So for example the code below throw an error:

print( "Alireza" + 1980)

like this:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#12>", line 1, in <module>
    print( "Alireza" + 1980)
TypeError: can only concatenate str (not "int") to str

To solve the issue, just add str to your number or value like:

print( "Alireza" + str(1980))

And the result as:

Alireza1980
31

Use f-strings to resolve the TypeError

# the following line causes a TypeError
# test = 'Here is a test that can be run' + 15 + 'times'

# same intent with an f-string
i = 15

test = f'Here is a test that can be run {i} times'

print(test)

# output
'Here is a test that can be run 15 times'
i = 15
# t = 'test' + i  # will cause a TypeError

# should be
t = f'test{i}'

print(t)

# output
'test15'
  • The issue may be attempting to evaluate an expression where a variable is the string of a numeric.
    • Convert the string to an int.
    • This scenario is specific to this question
  • When iterating, it's important to be aware of the type
i = '15'
# t = 15 + i  # will cause a TypeError

# convert the string to int
t = 15 + int(i)
print(t)

# output
30

Note

  • The preceding part of the answer addresses the TypeError shown in the question title, which is why people seem to be coming to this question.
  • However, this doesn't resolve the issue in relation to the example provided by the OP, which is addressed below.

Original Code Issues

  • TypeError is caused because type(message) → str.
    • The code iterates each character and attempts to add char, a str type, to an int
    • That issue can be resolved by converting char to an int
    • As the code is presented, secret_string needs to be initialized with 0 instead of "".
  • The code also results in a ValueError: chr() arg not in range(0x110000) because 7429146 is out of range for chr().
    • Resolved by using a smaller number
  • The output is not a string, as was intended, which leads to the Updated Code in the question.
message = input("Enter a message you want to be revealed: ")

secret_string = 0

for char in message:
    char = int(char)
    value = char + 742146
    secret_string += ord(chr(value))
    
print(f'\nRevealed: {secret_string}')

# Output
Enter a message you want to be revealed:  999

Revealed: 2226465

Updated Code Issues

  • message is now an int type, so for char in message: causes TypeError: 'int' object is not iterable
    • message is converted to int to make sure the input is an int.
    • Set the type with str()
  • Only convert value to Unicode with chr
    • Don't use ord
while True:
    try:
        message = str(int(input("Enter a message you want to be decrypt: ")))
        break
    except ValueError:
        print("Error, it must be an integer")
        
secret_string = ""
for char in message:
    
    value = int(char) + 10000
    
    secret_string += chr(value)

print("Decrypted", secret_string)

# output
Enter a message you want to be decrypt:  999
Decrypted ✙✙✙

Enter a message you want to be decrypt:  100
Decrypted ✑✐✐
21

instead of using " + " operator

print( "Alireza" + 1980)

Use comma " , " operator

print( "Alireza" , 1980)
3
  • print( "Alireza" , 1980) outputs Alireza 1980 with an extra space between.
    – stomtech
    Feb 24, 2020 at 2:46
  • 4
    To avoid the extra space it is possible to override the default value of the sep argument: print("Alireza" , 1980, sep='')
    – Tomerikoo
    Jun 9, 2020 at 19:49
  • 1
    This only works for print since it takes an unlimited number of arguments to print. It doesn't work in the general case of trying to concatenate a string with an integer.
    – Flimm
    May 20, 2021 at 9:39
4

Use this:

print("Program for calculating sum")
numbers=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
sum=0
for number in numbers:
    sum += number
print("Total Sum is: %d" %sum )
3

Problem is you are doing the following

str(chr(char + 7429146))

where char is a string. You cannot add a int with a string. this will cause that error

maybe if you want to get the ascii code and add it with a constant number. if so , you can just do ord(char) and add it to a number. but again, chr can take values between 0 and 1114112

0
2

Change secret_string += str(chr(char + 7429146))

To secret_string += chr(ord(char) + 7429146)

ord() converts the character to its Unicode integer equivalent. chr() then converts this integer into its Unicode character equivalent.

Also, 7429146 is too big of a number, it should be less than 1114111

0

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