Print Combining Strings and Numbers
Using print function without parentheses works with older versions of Python but is no longer supported on Python3, so you have to put the arguments inside parentheses. However, there are workarounds, as mentioned in the answers to this question. Since the support for Python2 has ended in Jan 1st 2020, the answer has been modified to be compatible with Python3.
You could do any of these (and there may be other ways):
(1) print("First number is {} and second number is {}".format(first, second))
(1b) print("First number is {first} and number is {second}".format(first=first, second=second))
or
(2) print('First number is', first, 'second number is', second)
(Note: A space will be automatically added afterwards when separated from a comma)
or
(3) print('First number %d and second number is %d' % (first, second))
or
(4) print('First number is ' + str(first) + ' second number is' + str(second))
Using format() (1/1b) is preferred where available.
Yes there is. The preferred syntax is to favor str.format
over the deprecated %
operator.
print "First number is {} and second number is {}".format(first, second)
if you are using 3.6 try this
k = 250
print(f"User pressed the: {k}")
Output: User pressed the: 250
The other answers explain how to produce a string formatted like in your example, but if all you need to do is to print
that stuff you could simply write:
first = 10
second = 20
print "First number is", first, "and second number is", second