1

I want to get a number input by the user via input() and compare it with a specific value, i.e., 3.

However, I have the impression my if statement doesn't work. The comparison is always False.

Start = input()
if Start == 3:
     print ("successful")
1
  • 2
    You should check your tabs (I recomend you to use four spaces, not regular tabs and not to mix them). greetings Commented Oct 3, 2015 at 19:27

4 Answers 4

3

Python 3 input function returns string.

Try like this

start = input("-->: ")
if start == "3":
    print("successful")
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Comments

1

Some things you could do on your own to get to the root of the problem:

Ways to get to know the type of the object:

print(type(start)) # prints <class 'str'>
print(repr(start)) # prints '3'

Unlike Python 2.x, the function input() returns a string object (and does not blindly evaluate the expression provided by the user):

input([prompt]):

If the prompt argument is present, it is written to standard output without a trailing newline. The function then reads a line from input, converts it to a string (stripping a trailing newline), and returns that. [...]

This should give an idea how to fix it (compare numbers to numbers).

For further reading:

Comments

1

You can also try this as an alternative:

Adding int will convert the variable to int data type.

input = int(raw_input("Enter a num: "))
if input == 3:
   print "Successful"

2 Comments

This is how to do it in Python 2.x (however, it should be noted that the built-in function input() is shadowed).
okay then, maybe just an alternative. @moooeeeep, thanks for pointing that out
0

you should check your tabs (I recomend you to use four spaces, not regular tabs and not to mix them)

start = 0
start = input("-->:")
if start == "3":
    print("Success")

Comments

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