String (computing): Difference between revisions
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}}</ref>, as opposed to integer variables (so called int variables) that can only hold integers (e.g. a number, such as 5) or a "float" variable, which can hold floating point numbers (e.g. numbers with decimal places - 5.5, 6.3, etc.) | }}</ref>, as opposed to integer variables (so called int variables) that can only hold integers (e.g. a number, such as 5) or a "float" variable, which can hold floating point numbers (e.g. numbers with decimal places - 5.5, 6.3, etc.) | ||
Some languages, such as [[Java]], do require the developer to declare a variable as a String type. Other languages, such as [[Python]] automatically "type casts" its variables. This can be helpful or it can also get in the way - if the number 1 is type cast by Python as a string (because it is in a [[list]] for example), the developer has to consciously convert that string variable to an 'int' type before any math functions can be performed. | Some languages, such as [[Java programming language|Java]], do require the developer to declare a variable as a String type. Other languages, such as [[Python programming language|Python]] automatically "type casts" its variables. This can be helpful or it can also get in the way - if the number 1 is type cast by Python as a string (because it is in a [[list]] for example), the developer has to consciously convert that string variable to an 'int' type before any math functions can be performed. | ||
Some developers prefer to type case their own variables (such as in Java, [[C programming language|C) or [[C++]], while some prefer the automatic type casting that Python does because it can simplify a program. Anyone who has had to debug a Python script to determine that somehow "Python decided this variable was a string instead of an int" understands why some developers become frustrated with dynamic type casting. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} |
Revision as of 11:03, 4 July 2009
In computing and more specifically in various programming languages, strings are a variable type that can hold text[1], as opposed to integer variables (so called int variables) that can only hold integers (e.g. a number, such as 5) or a "float" variable, which can hold floating point numbers (e.g. numbers with decimal places - 5.5, 6.3, etc.)
Some languages, such as Java, do require the developer to declare a variable as a String type. Other languages, such as Python automatically "type casts" its variables. This can be helpful or it can also get in the way - if the number 1 is type cast by Python as a string (because it is in a list for example), the developer has to consciously convert that string variable to an 'int' type before any math functions can be performed.
Some developers prefer to type case their own variables (such as in Java, [[C programming language|C) or C++, while some prefer the automatic type casting that Python does because it can simplify a program. Anyone who has had to debug a Python script to determine that somehow "Python decided this variable was a string instead of an int" understands why some developers become frustrated with dynamic type casting.
References
- ↑ Sun Microsystems. Java API Documentation: Strings. Retrieved on 2009-07-04.