It is often necessary to change data from one type to another type. Just as you can convert a sandwich from solid to liquid form by using a blender, you can change data from one type to another type using a typecast function. You write the name of the desired new type in the same way as a function call, for example
x = float("3.4") print(x-1)
changes the string "3.4"
to the float 3.4
, and then prints out 2.4
. Without the typecast, the program would crash, since it cannot subtract a number from a string.
Various typecasts behave differently:
float
to an int
loses the information after the decimal point, e.g. int(1.234)
gives 1
, and int(-34.7)
gives -34
.str
to an int
causes an error if the string is not formatted exactly like an integer, e.g. int("1.234")
causes an error.str
to a float
causes an error if the string is not a number, e.g. float("sandwich")
causes an error.A common use of typecasting that we will see soon is to convert user input, which is always a string, to numerical form. Here is a quick illustration.