# To combine an str and int you need to convert the int to a str first.
# You can do this all on one line however like so. Just keep adding plus signs between statements:
string = 'Hello there ' + str(your_variable1_here) + ' oh my more text ' + str(your_variable2_here)
# Working example that makes sure all items in a list are strings:
list = ['hello', 'howdy', 73, 'greetings']
for i, c in enumerate(list):
assert isinstance(c, str), 'List index ' + str(i) + ' was invalid! ' + '(It's value is: ' + str(c) + ')'
# Will output this error because '73' is an INT object and not a STR object:
# AssertionError: List index 2 was not valid! (73)
#prints the sum of any number
def sum_of_digits(nums: int):
nums=str(nums)
sum = 0
for i in nums:
sum+=int(i)
return sum
print(sum_of_digits(123))
#prints '6'. 1+2+3
#by chaing it's type using str() function
# We have a string and a integer
string1 = "superman"
num1 = 20
# concatenated string
concatString = string1 + str(num1)
print(concatString)
# In python you need to cast the variable to a string with str()
var = 3
print('Variable = ' + str(var) )
string = 'string'
for i in range(11):
string += 'i'
print string
# It will print string 012345678910.
>>> print 'red' + str(3)
red3
>>>
number = [1,2,3,4,5]
number.reverse()
# to concatenate strings and int
# One needs to use str() to convert the string into int
print("Reverse list: "+ str(number))
a = '123' # This is a string
b = 'love' # This is a string
c = 456 # This is an integer
# 'a' can be converted to an integer but 'b' cannot
print(c + int(a)) # Output - 579
print(c + int(b)) # This will give a Value Error