Issue
I'm trying to convert a string to a python decimal.
This works
from decimal import *
mystr = '123.45'
print(Decimal(mystr))
But when I want to use the thousand separator and the locale, it doesn't. Converting to float works fine.
from locale import *
setlocale(LC_NUMERIC,'German_Germany.1252')
from decimal import *
mystr = '1.234,56'
print(atof(mystr))
print(Decimal(mystr))
returns the float and an error
1234.56
InvalidOperation: [<class 'decimal.ConversionSyntax'>]
Is there a right way to convert the string without manually transforming it via float or hackier solutions? FYA, my current hacky solution is:
print(Decimal(f'{atof(mystr):2.2f}'))
Solution
I did some research and here is the solution:
import decimal
import locale
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'de_DE')
mystr = '1.234,56'
num = locale.atof(mystr, decimal.Decimal)
print('{}'.format(num))
print('{:n}'.format(num))
1234.56
1.234,56
Under the hood locale.atof
calls delocalize
function which does exactly what @lsma suggests.
Answered By - newtover
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