Short way to convert string to int
If it is user input, chances are the user inputted a string. So better catch the exception as well with try
:
user_input = '88.8'
try:
user_input = int(float(user_input))
except:
user_input = 0
print(user_input)
my_input = int(my_input)
There is no shorter way than using the int
function (as you mention)
Maybe you were hoping for something like my_number = my_input.to_int
. But it is not currently possible to do it natively. And funny enough, if you want to extract the integer part from a float-like string, you have to convert to float
first, and then to int
. Or else you get ValueError: invalid literal for int()
.
The robust way:
my_input = int(float(my_input))
For example:
>>> nb = "88.8"
>>> int(nb)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: '88.8'
>>> int(float(nb))
88