On 2015-01-11, Joel Goldstick <joel.goldst...@gmail.com> wrote: > That's fine, but its different than your original question. In your > original question you had a string of floats separated by commas. To > solve that problem you need to first split the string on the commas: > > my_list = "1.23, 2.4, 3.123".split(",") > > that will give you ['1.23', '2.4', '3.123']
Well, almost: $ python Python 2.7.9 (default, Jan 11 2015, 15:39:24) [GCC 4.7.3] on linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> "1.23, 2.4, 3.123".split(",") ['1.23', ' 2.4', ' 3.123'] Note the leating whitespace in two of the elements. In this case, the leading whitespace is ignored if you pass the values to float(): >>>map(float,"1.23, 2.4, 3.123".split(",")) [1.23, 2.4, 3.123] Or for you young folks who prefer the more long-winded version: >>> [float(s) for s in "1.23, 2.4, 3.123".split(",")] [1.23, 2.4, 3.123] In other situations, the leading whitespace might matter. -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list