RoyalSwish
RoyalSwish

Reputation: 1565

How do I check if input is a number in Python?

I have a Python script which converts a decimal number into a binary one and this obviously uses their input.

I would like to have the script validate that the input is a number and not anything else which will stop the script.

I have tried an if/else statement but I don't really know how to go about it. I have tried if decimal.isint(): and if decimal.isalpha(): but they just throw up errors when I enter a string.

print("Welcome to the Decimal to Binary converter!")
while True:
    print("Type a decimal number you wish to convert:")
    decimal = int(input())
    if decimal.isint():
        binary = bin(decimal)[2:]
        print(binary)
    else:
        print("Please enter a number.")

Without the if/else statement, the code works just fine and does its job.

Upvotes: 3

Views: 37011

Answers (1)

Martijn Pieters
Martijn Pieters

Reputation: 1121176

If the int() call succeeded, decimal is already a number. You can only call .isdigit() (the correct name) on a string:

decimal = input()
if decimal.isdigit():
    decimal = int(decimal)

The alternative is to use exception handling; if a ValueError is thrown, the input was not a number:

while True:
    print("Type a decimal number you wish to convert:")
    try:
        decimal = int(input())
    except ValueError:
        print("Please enter a number.")
        continue

    binary = bin(decimal)[2:]

Instead of using the bin() function and removing the starting 0b, you could also use the format() function, using the 'b' format, to format an integer as a binary string, without the leading text:

>>> format(10, 'b')
'1010'

The format() function makes it easy to add leading zeros:

>>> format(10, '08b')
'00001010'

Upvotes: 8

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