The isdigit()
method returns True
if all characters in a string are digits. If not, it returns False
.
Example
str1 = '342'
print(str1.isdigit())
str2 = 'python'
print(str2.isdigit())
# Output: True
# False
Syntax of String isdigit()
The syntax of isdigit()
is
string.isdigit()
isdigit() Parameters
The isdigit()
doesn't take any parameters.
Return Value from isdigit()
The isdigit()
returns:
- True if all characters in the string are digits.
- False if at least one character is not a digit.
Example 1: Working of isdigit()
s = "28212"
print(s.isdigit())
# contains alphabets and spaces
s = "Mo3 nicaG el l22er"
print(s.isdigit())
Output
True False
A digit is a character that has property value:
Numeric_Type = Digit
Numeric_Type = Decimal
In Python, superscript and subscripts (usually written using unicode) are also considered digit characters. Hence, if the string contains these characters along with decimal characters, isdigit()
returns True.
The roman numerals, currency numerators and fractions (usually written using unicode) are considered numeric characters but not digits. The isdigit()
returns False if the string contains these characters.
To check whether a character is a numeric character or not, you can use isnumeric() method.
Example 2: String Containing digits and Numeric Characters
s = '23455'
print(s.isdigit())
#s = '²3455'
# subscript is a digit
s = '\u00B23455'
print(s.isdigit())
# s = '½'
# fraction is not a digit
s = '\u00BD'
print(s.isdigit())
Output
True True False