Typecasting in Python

Python only has a single int type. To convert a string to an int, use int() like this:

>>> str = '123'
>>> num = int(str)
>>> num
123

Edit: Also to convert to float, use float() in the exact same way.


You can convert a string to a 32-bit signed integer with the int function:

str = "1234"
i = int(str)  // i is a 32-bit integer

If the string does not represent an integer, you'll get a ValueError exception. Note, however, that if the string does represent an integer, but that integer does not fit into a 32-bit signed int, then you'll actually get an object of type long instead.

You can then convert it to other widths and signednesses with some simple math:

s8 = (i + 2**7) % 2**8 - 2**7      // convert to signed 8-bit
u8 = i % 2**8                      // convert to unsigned 8-bit
s16 = (i + 2**15) % 2**16 - 2**15  // convert to signed 16-bit
u16 = i % 2**16                    // convert to unsigned 16-bit
s32 = (i + 2**31) % 2**32 - 2**31  // convert to signed 32-bit
u32 = i % 2**32                    // convert to unsigned 32-bit
s64 = (i + 2**63) % 2**64 - 2**63  // convert to signed 64-bit
u64 = i % 2**64                    // convert to unsigned 64-bit

You can convert strings to floating point with the float function:

f = float("3.14159")

Python floats are what other languages refer to as double, i.e. they are 64-bits. There are no 32-bit floats in Python.


The following types -- for the most part -- don't exist in Python in the first place. In Python, strings are converted to ints, longs or floats, because that's all there is.

You're asking for conversions that aren't relevant to Python in the first place. Here's the list of types you asked for and their Python equivalent.

  • unsigned and signed int 8 bits, int
  • unsigned and signed int 16 bits, int
  • unsigned and signed int 32 bits, unsigned: long, signed int
  • unsigned and signed int 64 bits, long

  • double, float

  • float, float
  • string, this is what you had to begin with

I don't know what the following are, so I don't know a Python equivalent.

  • unsigned and signed 8 bit,
  • unsigned and signed 16 bit,
  • unsigned and signed 32 bit,
  • unsigned and signed 64 bit.

You already have all the conversions that matter: int(), long() and float().