Hi I tried the first type method but it seens that it doesn't work. Could anyone help me about it?
>>> s = '3.145' >>> type(s) == type(float()) False >>> type(s) <type 'str'> >>> type(float()) <type 'float'> >>> Best regards, Wei On 8/7/08, Wei Guo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi Thanks for Tyler and Edwin's help. > > For my questions, I need to import some xml file and there are floating > number and strings in it. I need to process string and number differently. > This is reason that I am asking question here. Is this background > information we need for this quesions. > > Btw, which way is better? type or with exception ValueError? > > Thanks, > > Wei > > > On 8/6/08, Tyler Breisacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> It's generally a bad idea to use "except" without naming a specific >> exception. The exception you might expect in this case is ValueError. Any >> other exception *should* be uncaught if it happens. By the way, this method >> will return true for integers as well as floats. For example, isFloat('3') >> will return 3.0. So make sure this is what you want, since it wasn't 100% >> clear from the original message. >> >> >> Wei Guo wrote: >> >>> #this is a better way of testing a string for float >>> def isFloat(s): >>> try: >>> s = float(s) >>> except: >>> return False >>> return True >>> >> >> >> -- >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> > >
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