Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Python 2.7 Try And Except ValueError

I query user input which is expected to be an int by using int(raw_input(...)) However when the user doesn't enter an integer, i.e. just hits return, I get a ValueError. def inputV

Solution 1:

A quick and dirty solution is:

parsed = False
while not parsed:
    try:
        x = int(raw_input('Enter the value:'))
        parsed = True # we only get here if the previous line didn't throw an exception
    except ValueError:
        print 'Invalid value!'

This will keep prompting the user for input until parsed is True which will only happen if there was no exception.


Solution 2:

Instead of calling inputValue recursively, you need to replace raw_input with your own function with validation and retry. Something like this:

def user_int(msg):
  try:
    return int(raw_input(msg))
  except ValueError:
    return user_int("Entered value is invalid, please try again")

Solution 3:

Is something like this what you're going for?

def inputValue(inputMatrix, defaultValue, playerValue):
    while True:
        try:
            rowPos = int(raw_input("Please enter the row, 0 indexed."))
            colPos = int(raw_input("Please enter the column, 0 indexed."))
        except ValueError:
            continue
        if inputMatrix[rowPos][colPos] == defaultValue:
            inputMatrix[rowPos][colPos] = playerValue
            break
    return inputMatrix

print inputValue([[0,0,0], [0,0,0], [0,0,0]], 0, 1)

You were right to try and handle the exception, but you don't seem to understand how functions work... Calling inputValue from within inputValue is called recursion, and it's probably not what you want here.


Post a Comment for "Python 2.7 Try And Except ValueError"