assign operator to variable in python?
I know this is a really old thread, but I believe at the time people didn't know about the eval
function (Maybe it came with Python 3). So here's an updated answer to the question
a = input('enter a value')
b = input('enter a value')
op = input('enter an operand')
expression = a + op + b # simple string concatenation
result = eval(expression)
If the input is not expected to be valid all the time ast.literal_eval
can be used instead. It raises an exception if the input isn't a valid Python datatype, so the code won't be executed if it's not.
Eg. if a
, b
and op
are respectively 5, 10, + then
result
is 15
You can use the operator module and a dictionary:
import operator
ops = {
"+": operator.add,
"-": operator.sub,
"*": operator.mul,
"/": operator.div
}
op_char = input('enter a operand')
op_func = ops[op_char]
result = op_func(a, b)
You'll need to compare the user's inputted string to your list of operands by hand. There is no analogue of int() here, since operators are keywords in the language and not values.
Once you've compared that input string to your list of operands and determined the operator that it corresponds to, you can use the Python standard library's operator module to calculate the result of applying the operator to your two operands.
The operator module http://docs.python.org/library/operator.html exposes functions corresponding to practically all Python operators. You can map operator symbols to those functions to retrieve the proper function, then assign it to your op variable and compute op(a, b).