How do I change the output format of a print statement in python?










1















I wrote a code like below



A = print("apple")


And,
I want to change the data type of A to string, so I wrote the following code.



A = str(print"apple")
type(A)


But, the answer was "None". In this
What should I do in this situation?



Actually what I'm doing right now is to write something like the output to a text file.



openFp = open("solution.txt","w")
p2 = str(print("I_B : ",I_B))
openFp.writelines(p2+"n")
openFp.close()


Entering this code will always result in 'None'.










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

    – Abdul Niyas P M
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:46







  • 1





    What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

    – Eypros
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:47















1















I wrote a code like below



A = print("apple")


And,
I want to change the data type of A to string, so I wrote the following code.



A = str(print"apple")
type(A)


But, the answer was "None". In this
What should I do in this situation?



Actually what I'm doing right now is to write something like the output to a text file.



openFp = open("solution.txt","w")
p2 = str(print("I_B : ",I_B))
openFp.writelines(p2+"n")
openFp.close()


Entering this code will always result in 'None'.










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

    – Abdul Niyas P M
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:46







  • 1





    What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

    – Eypros
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:47













1












1








1








I wrote a code like below



A = print("apple")


And,
I want to change the data type of A to string, so I wrote the following code.



A = str(print"apple")
type(A)


But, the answer was "None". In this
What should I do in this situation?



Actually what I'm doing right now is to write something like the output to a text file.



openFp = open("solution.txt","w")
p2 = str(print("I_B : ",I_B))
openFp.writelines(p2+"n")
openFp.close()


Entering this code will always result in 'None'.










share|improve this question














I wrote a code like below



A = print("apple")


And,
I want to change the data type of A to string, so I wrote the following code.



A = str(print"apple")
type(A)


But, the answer was "None". In this
What should I do in this situation?



Actually what I'm doing right now is to write something like the output to a text file.



openFp = open("solution.txt","w")
p2 = str(print("I_B : ",I_B))
openFp.writelines(p2+"n")
openFp.close()


Entering this code will always result in 'None'.







python string






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 12 '18 at 7:42









JAE_RYONGJAE_RYONG

264




264







  • 2





    Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

    – Abdul Niyas P M
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:46







  • 1





    What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

    – Eypros
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:47












  • 2





    Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

    – Abdul Niyas P M
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:46







  • 1





    What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

    – Eypros
    Nov 12 '18 at 7:47







2




2





Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

– Abdul Niyas P M
Nov 12 '18 at 7:46






Print function does not return values, Instead it write the value into the stdout(by default). Why don't you store the string directly into a variable?

– Abdul Niyas P M
Nov 12 '18 at 7:46





1




1





What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

– Eypros
Nov 12 '18 at 7:47





What exactly are you trying to accomplish? I think you have misunderstood the function of print.

– Eypros
Nov 12 '18 at 7:47












1 Answer
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That's impossible.



Because print just simply prints the parameter, then returns nothing, so you force to print the print(...) or make as variable it's gonna be None, so nothing you can do.






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    1 Answer
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    0














    That's impossible.



    Because print just simply prints the parameter, then returns nothing, so you force to print the print(...) or make as variable it's gonna be None, so nothing you can do.






    share|improve this answer



























      0














      That's impossible.



      Because print just simply prints the parameter, then returns nothing, so you force to print the print(...) or make as variable it's gonna be None, so nothing you can do.






      share|improve this answer

























        0












        0








        0







        That's impossible.



        Because print just simply prints the parameter, then returns nothing, so you force to print the print(...) or make as variable it's gonna be None, so nothing you can do.






        share|improve this answer













        That's impossible.



        Because print just simply prints the parameter, then returns nothing, so you force to print the print(...) or make as variable it's gonna be None, so nothing you can do.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 12 '18 at 8:01









        U9-ForwardU9-Forward

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