461

I have a tuple of tuples containing strings:

T1 = (('13', '17', '18', '21', '32'),
      ('07', '11', '13', '14', '28'),
      ('01', '05', '06', '08', '15', '16'))

I want to convert all the string elements into integers and put them back into a list of lists:

T2 = [[13, 17, 18, 21, 32],
      [7, 11, 13, 14, 28],
      [1, 5, 6, 8, 15, 16]]
0

14 Answers 14

654

int() is the Python standard built-in function to convert a string into an integer value. You call it with a string containing a number as the argument, and it returns the number converted to an integer:

>>> int("1") + 1
2

If you know the structure of your list, T1 (that it simply contains lists, only one level), you could do this in Python 3:

T2 = [list(map(int, x)) for x in T1]

In Python 2:

T2 = [map(int, x) for x in T1]
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5 Comments

why not T2 = map(lambda lol: map(int, lol), T1)? Either map or list comprehensions, both is silly ;)
@flyingsheep Double map seems silly to me, this seems just fine.
How about removing Python 2 example (because of end of life for Python2) ?
@flyingsheep map(lambda) is also silly ;) A list comprehension is more natural and easier to read.
@Alisso I moved it lower. Legacy Python 2 code is still in use, and anyway, don't worry about removing stuff from an answer unless it makes it significantly worse.
29

You can do this with a list comprehension:

T2 = [[int(column) for column in row] for row in T1]

The inner list comprehension ([int(column) for column in row]) builds a list of ints from a sequence of int-able objects, like decimal strings, in row. The outer list comprehension ([... for row in T1])) builds a list of the results of the inner list comprehension applied to each item in T1.

The code snippet will fail if any of the rows contain objects that can't be converted by int. You'll need a smarter function if you want to process rows containing non-decimal strings.

If you know the structure of the rows, you can replace the inner list comprehension with a call to a function of the row. Eg.

T2 = [parse_a_row_of_T1(row) for row in T1]

Comments

21

Using only list comprehensions:

[[int(y) for y in x] for x in T1]

Comments

10

Instead of putting int( ), put float( ) which will let you use decimals along with integers.

1 Comment

Can you explain more details on you answer?
9

I would agree with everyone’s answers so far but the problem is that if you do not have all integers, they will crash.

If you wanted to exclude non-integers then

T1 = (('13', '17', '18', '21', '32'),
      ('07', '11', '13', '14', '28'),
      ('01', '05', '06', '08', '15', '16'))
new_list = list(list(int(a) for a in b) for b in T1 if a.isdigit())

This yields only actual digits. The reason I don't use direct list comprehensions is because list comprehension leaks their internal variables.

1 Comment

isdigit is tricky, try it on -1. int(<str>) is the way to check by try/except.
8
T3=[]

for i in range(0,len(T1)):
    T3.append([])
    for j in range(0,len(T1[i])):
        b=int(T1[i][j])
        T3[i].append(b)

print T3

1 Comment

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Rather than only post a block of code, please explain why this code solves the problem posed. Without an explanation, this is not an answer.
8

Try this.

x = "1"

x is a string because it has quotes around it, but it has a number in it.

x = int(x)

Since x has the number 1 in it, I can turn it in to a integer.

To see if a string is a number, you can do this.

def is_number(var):
    try:
        if var == int(var):
            return True
    except Exception:
        return False

x = "1"

y = "test"

x_test = is_number(x)

print(x_test)

It should print to IDLE True because x is a number.

y_test = is_number(y)

print(y_test)

It should print to IDLE False because y in not a number.

2 Comments

Your is_number function is wrong. '1' is not equal to 1. This is not Perl. :-P
Don’t reinvent the wheel, use x.isnumeric().
4

Using list comprehensions:

t2 = [map(int, list(l)) for l in t1]

1 Comment

in python 3 this returns a list of map objects :(
2

See this function

def parse_int(s):
    try:
        res = int(eval(str(s)))
        if type(res) == int:
            return res
    except:
        return

Then

val = parse_int('10')  # Return 10
val = parse_int('0')  # Return 0
val = parse_int('10.5')  # Return 10
val = parse_int('0.0')  # Return 0
val = parse_int('Ten')  # Return None

You can also check

if val == None:  # True if input value can not be converted
    pass  # Note: Don't use 'if not val:'

1 Comment

eval is evil: you should replace it with ast.literal_eval.
2

Yet another functional solution for Python 2:

from functools import partial

map(partial(map, int), T1)

Python 3 will be a little bit messy though:

list(map(list, map(partial(map, int), T1)))

we can fix this with a wrapper

def oldmap(f, iterable):
    return list(map(f, iterable))

oldmap(partial(oldmap, int), T1)

Comments

1

If it's only a tuple of tuples, something like rows=[map(int, row) for row in rows] will do the trick. (There's a list comprehension and a call to map(f, lst), which is equal to [f(a) for a in lst], in there.)

Eval is not what you want to do, in case there's something like __import__("os").unlink("importantsystemfile") in your database for some reason. Always validate your input (if with nothing else, the exception int() will raise if you have bad input).

Comments

1

In Python 3.5.1 things like these work:

c = input('Enter number:')
print (int(float(c)))
print (round(float(c)))

and

Enter number:  4.7
4
5

Comments

0

Python has built in function int(string) and optional parameter base.

if your string contains an Integer value, it will convert that to the corresponding Integer value. However if you have decimnal number as string you'll need float() to convert it.

Usage:

a = '22'
b = int(a)

and

if a = '22.22'
b = int(a) '''will give error, invalid literal for int().'''
b = float(a) '''will convert the string.'''

Comments

-2

You can do something like this:

T1 = (('13', '17', '18', '21', '32'),  
     ('07', '11', '13', '14', '28'),  
     ('01', '05', '06', '08', '15', '16'))  
new_list = list(list(int(a) for a in b if a.isdigit()) for b in T1)  
print(new_list)  

Comments

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