I am quite a newbie in Python. I wrote this and got this error when i typed a letter in the input:
TypeError: unorderable types: str() >= int()
Here is the code that I wrote:
user_input = input('How old are you?: ')
if user_input >= 18:
print('You are an adult')
elif user_input < 18:
print('You are quite young')
elif user_input == str():
print ('That is not a number')
You should do:
user_input = int(input('How old are you?: '))
so as you explicitly cast your input as int, it will always try to convert the input into an integer, and will raise a ValueError when you enter a string that can't be converted to an int. To handle those cases, do:
except ValueError:
print('That is not a number')
So, the full solution might be like below:
try:
user_input = int(input('How old are you?: '))
except ValueError:
print('That is not a number')
else:
if user_input >= 18:
print('You are an adult')
else:
print('You are quite young')
user_input is a str, you're comparing it to an int. Python does not know how to do that. You will need to convert one of them to the other type to get a proper comparison.
For example, you can convert a string to an integer with the int() function:
user_input = int(input('How old are you?: '))
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With