Help printing the integers of a longer number
Jussi Piitulainen
jpiitula at ling.helsinki.fi
Thu Mar 28 13:11:03 EDT 2013
Jussi Piitulainen writes:
> khaosyt at gmail.com writes:
>
> > I want to print the individual numbers of a large number using
> > division and modulus division.
> >
> > For example:
> >
> > Enter a positive integer: 54321
> > 5
> > 4
> > 3
> > 2
> > 1
>
> Those numbers are called the digits of the large number.
>
> With divmod(54321, 10) you get both the number that is "left" after
> removing the last digit, and the last digit:
>
> >>> left, last = divmod(54321, 10)
> >>> left
> 5432
> >>> last
> 1
>
> Define a function, print_digits(num), that prints the digits of the
> non-negative integer num. Zero turns out fine so let's allow zero:
>
> def print_digits(num):
> left, last = divmod(num, 10)
> if left < 0: print the digits of left
> print(last)
Blush. That should be:
...
if left > 0: ...
...
(Or just "if left" because left will eventually be 0, positive numbers
are true values, and 0 is a false value.)
Sorry about that.
> How do you print the digits of left? With print_digits. Why does it
> work? Because you only call print_digits again when left is closer to
> zero than num.
>
> It's called recursion.
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