I’m currently doing Dr. Charles Severence’s lessons on FreeCodeCamp to try to learn Python3. I’m on lesson exercise 02_03 and confused about multiplying floating-point and integer values.
The goal is to write a Python program multiplying hours worked by pay rate to come up with a pay quantity.
This is the code I wrote:
h = input("Enter hours: ")
r = input("Enter pay rate: ")
p = float(h) * r
I got a traceback error, and the video said the correct way to solve said error was change Line 3 from p = float(h) * r
to p = float(h) * float(r)
.
However, what I’m confused about is why would I need to change r
to a floating-point value when it’s already a floating-point value (since it’d be a currency value like 5.00 or something once I typed it in per the input()
command*?
What am I missing here?
*I can’t remember: are the individual commands in a python line called “commands”?
Edit: Wrote plus signs in my post here instead of asterisks. Fixed.
EDIT: Thanks to @Labna@lemmy.world and @woop_woop@lemmy.world. I thought that the input()
function was a string until the end-user types something in upon being prompted, and then becomes a floating-point value or integer value (or stays a string) according to what was typed.
This is incorrect: the value is a string regardless of what is typed unless it is then converted to another type.
But I thought the “value” doesn’t exist until the end-user types in the value, due to the use of
input()
. So it starts off as a string, then becomes whatever is typed in, which then gets filtered through the next line. So if I type3
, it’ll be considered as an integer, and likewise as a float if I type3.00
.the signature for the
input
function (that’s what it’s called instead of command) isdef input(__prompt: Any = ...) -> str
which means it’s always going to return a string.
there’s no real way for something to do that automatically without a much more robust setup.
this snippet proves that
test_int = input('enter integer:') print(type(test_int)) test_float = input('enter float:') print(type(test_float)) test_str = input('enter string:') print(type(test_str))
it is the responsibility of your program to validate and do whatever you want with the result, and part of that can include casting it to a different type.
Oh, I think I understand now.
Thank you for clarifying that to me!
No problem bud, good luck