+ 1

Is whatever given as input in python is taken as string

s=input() Input given is 3 Is s string or int

27th Apr 2020, 6:36 AM
Guruchandran Sekaran
Guruchandran Sekaran - avatar
4 Respostas
+ 1
Yes if no type is specified in input() python treat it as string. You can see that in the example here👇, when I operate on "s", it is treated as string not an integer even if the input is integer or float https://code.sololearn.com/cj2SO26rBfc8/?ref=app
27th Apr 2020, 6:46 AM
Arsenic
Arsenic - avatar
0
Its a string and so it has to be. How would you know what the programmer is asking for? Maybe a user name, for which I choose "123". If you need an int, use "x=int(input())".
27th Apr 2020, 6:46 AM
Manu_1-9-8-5
Manu_1-9-8-5 - avatar
0
Computers only understand binary (0/1 => on/off => 0/5v)... until they are programmed to handle other kind of values. With these binary values, CPU are made to handle multiple of groups of 8 bits (bytes, historically the max, then comes 16 bits CPU, 32 bits, 64 bits...), so the computer more generally "understand" integers from 0 to 2 power n (excluded, where n is the number of bits). Quite same for signed integers, and floating point (real) numbers... but that's not really a concern for now ^^ Input are done by translating char entered by user through a char encoding convention (ascii, unicode, ...) where a char is nothing else than an integer for the computer... That's the reason of the "string" return type of input() function: charge to the programmer to do type conversion (cast) according to the context needs (you could even define specialized helpers function wich encapsulate the input call and the type cast ;))
27th Apr 2020, 7:55 AM
visph
visph - avatar