The Python Oracle

How can I print variable and string on same line in Python?

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Chapters
00:00 How Can I Print Variable And String On Same Line In Python?
00:34 Accepted Answer Score 375
01:18 Answer 2 Score 69
02:07 Answer 3 Score 29
02:18 Answer 4 Score 154
02:53 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1715...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#python #string #variables #printing

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 375


Use , to separate strings and variables while printing:

print("If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be: ", births, "births")

, in print function separates the items by a single space:

>>> print("foo", "bar", "spam")
foo bar spam

or better use string formatting:

print("If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be: {} births".format(births))

String formatting is much more powerful and allows you to do some other things as well, like padding, fill, alignment, width, set precision, etc.

>>> print("{:d} {:03d} {:>20f}".format(1, 2, 1.1))
1 002             1.100000
  ^^^
  0's padded to 2

Demo:

>>> births = 4
>>> print("If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be: ", births, "births")
If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be:  4 births

# formatting
>>> print("If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be: {} births".format(births))
If there was a birth every 7 seconds, there would be: 4 births



ANSWER 2

Score 154


Python is a very versatile language. You may print variables by different methods. I have listed below five methods. You may use them according to your convenience.

Example:

a = 1
b = 'ball'

Method 1:

print('I have %d %s' % (a, b))

Method 2:

print('I have', a, b)

Method 3:

print('I have {} {}'.format(a, b))

Method 4:

print('I have ' + str(a) + ' ' + b)

Method 5:

print(f'I have {a} {b}')

The output would be:

I have 1 ball



ANSWER 3

Score 69


Two more

The First one

>>> births = str(5)
>>> print("there are " + births + " births.")
there are 5 births.

When adding strings, they concatenate.

The Second One

Also the format (Python 2.6 and newer) method of strings is probably the standard way:

>>> births = str(5)
>>>
>>> print("there are {} births.".format(births))
there are 5 births.

This format method can be used with lists as well

>>> format_list = ['five', 'three']
>>> # * unpacks the list:
>>> print("there are {} births and {} deaths".format(*format_list))  
there are five births and three deaths

or dictionaries

>>> format_dictionary = {'births': 'five', 'deaths': 'three'}
>>> # ** unpacks the dictionary
>>> print("there are {births} births, and {deaths} deaths".format(**format_dictionary))
there are five births, and three deaths

Edit:

Its 2022 and python3 has f strings now.

>>> x = 15
>>> f"there are {x} births"
'there are 15 births'



ANSWER 4

Score 29


If you want to work with python 3, it's very simple:

print("If there was a birth every 7 second, there would be %d births." % (births))