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Home/ Questions/Q 181983
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T14:51:34+00:00 2026-05-11T14:51:34+00:00

I’ve got some Python code that runs through a list of strings and converts

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I’ve got some Python code that runs through a list of strings and converts them to integers or floating point numbers if possible. Doing this for integers is pretty easy

if element.isdigit():   newelement = int(element) 

Floating point numbers are more difficult. Right now I’m using partition('.') to split the string and checking to make sure that one or both sides are digits.

partition = element.partition('.') if (partition[0].isdigit() and partition[1] == '.' and partition[2].isdigit())      or (partition[0] == '' and partition[1] == '.' and partition[2].isdigit())      or (partition[0].isdigit() and partition[1] == '.' and partition[2] == ''):   newelement = float(element) 

This works, but obviously the if statement for that is a bit of a bear. The other solution I considered is to just wrap the conversion in a try/catch block and see if it succeeds, as described in this question.

Anyone have any other ideas? Opinions on the relative merits of the partition and try/catch approaches?

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  1. 2026-05-11T14:51:35+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 2:51 pm

    I would just use..

    try:     float(element) except ValueError:     print "Not a float" 

    ..it’s simple, and it works. Note that it will still throw OverflowError if element is e.g. 1<<1024.

    Another option would be a regular expression:

    import re if re.match(r'^-?\d+(?:\.\d+)$', element) is None:     print "Not float" 
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