Reputation: 451
I am having problems with this Python program I am creating to do maths, working out and so solutions but I'm getting the syntax error: "unexpected character after line continuation character in python"
This is my code:
print("Length between sides: "+str((length*length)*2.6)+" \ 1.5 = "+str(((length*length)*2.6)\1.5)+" Units")
My problem is with \1.5
. I have tried \\1.5
but it doesn't work either.
Using python 2.7.2
Upvotes: 22
Views: 277517
Reputation: 45
This is not related to the question; just for future purpose. In my case, I got this error message when using regex. Here is my code and the correction
text = "Hey I'm Kelly, how're you and how's it going?"
import re
When I got error:
x=re.search(r'('\w+)|(\w+'\w+)', text)
The correct code:
x=re.search(r"('\w+)|(\w+'\w+)", text)
I'm meant to use double quotes after the r instead of single quotes.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 121
You must press enter after continuation character
Note: Space after continuation character leads to error
cost = {"apples": [3.5, 2.4, 2.3], "bananas": [1.2, 1.8]}
0.9 * average(cost["apples"]) + \ """enter here"""
0.1 * average(cost["bananas"])
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 2685
As the others already mentioned: the division operator is / rather than **. If you wanna print the ** character within a string you have to escape it:
print("foo \\")
# will print: foo \
I think to print the string you wanted I think you gonna need this code:
print("Length between sides: " + str((length*length)*2.6) + " \\ 1.5 = " + str(((length*length)*2.6)/1.5) + " Units")
And this one is a more readable version of the above (using the format method):
message = "Length between sides: {0} \\ 1.5 = {1} Units"
val1 = (length * length) * 2.6
val2 = ((length * length) * 2.6) / 1.5
print(message.format(val1, val2))
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 336378
The backslash \
is the line continuation character the error message is talking about, and after it, only newline characters/whitespace are allowed (before the next non-whitespace continues the "interrupted" line.
print "This is a very long string that doesn't fit" + \
"on a single line"
Outside of a string, a backslash can only appear in this way. For division, you want a slash: /
.
If you want to write a verbatim backslash in a string, escape it by doubling it: "\\"
In your code, you're using it twice:
print("Length between sides: " + str((length*length)*2.6) +
" \ 1.5 = " + # inside a string; treated as literal
str(((length*length)*2.6)\1.5)+ # outside a string, treated as line cont
# character, but no newline follows -> Fail
" Units")
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 500673
The division operator is /
rather than \
.
Also, the backslash has a special meaning inside a Python string. Either escape it with another backslash:
"\\ 1.5 = "`
or use a raw string
r" \ 1.5 = "
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 391
Well, what do you try to do? If you want to use division, use "/" not "\". If it is something else, explain it in a bit more detail, please.
Upvotes: 0