int <integerName> = <integerValue>; String <StringName> = Integer.toString(<integerName>); /*where integerName is the name of the integer value, integerValue is the assigned value of the integer, and where StringName is the name of the string holding the parsed integer. */
no, you cant. it only works on string
parseInt is a method in the Integer class in java and is used to parse string values into integer numbers. ex: int i = Integer.parseInt("10"); After the above line of code, the variable i will be assigned a value of 10 which is the numeric value of the string passed as argument to the parseInt method
Integers - The "is_int()" function can be used to check if a variable is has an integer for its value. ---- is_int($variable); // Returns true if $variable is an integer - otherwise false ---- Numeric Strings - Numeric strings are strings with numbers (or things that count as numbers) in them. Numeric-string variables are not integer variables. Numeric-string variables are passed on through forms, instead of integer variables - if you were wondering. Check form values using string formats, and not integer formats. The "is_numeric()" function can be used to check if a variable is a string with numbers - and only numbers - in it (except things that add up to be numbers). ---- is_numeric($variable); // Returns true if $variable is a string, and only contains numbers (broadly speaking) - false otherwise ---- Strings - String values are just text, basically. String variables can contain integers, but that does not make it an integer-type variable - it makes it a numeric string variable. The "is_string" function can be used to check if a variable contains the value of a string. ---- is_string($variable); // Returns true if $variable is a string - false otherwise
parseInt() is a method in the Integer class in Java that is used for parsing string values as numbers. int i = Integer.parseInt("10"); would result in i being assigned a value of 10
No, it is an integer. You can save an integer value to a string variable but, in this case the value is explicitly stated to be 3.
There are several different methods to convert an integer variable to a string variable in Java. For example, one can use the following code to convert an integer variable to a string variable: Integer.toString(number)
Dim aInt as Integer = 5 Dim aStr As String = String.Empty aStr = System.Convert.ToString(aInt)
std::string input = ""; std::getline (std::cin, input); // get input from stdin std::stringstream ss (input); // place input in a string stream integer num = 0; if (ss >> num) // extract integer from string stream { // Success! } else { // Fail! }
One can convert a string variable to an int variable in Java using the parse integer command. The syntax is int foo = Integer.parseInt("1234"). This line will convert the string in the parenthesis into an integer.
Input the number as a string. If the string has a length of 4 and contains only digits, convert the string to an integer. If the integer is less than 1000, input another number. Otherwise, copy the integer and divide by 100 to get rid of the two least-significant digits. Divide again by 2 and take the remainder. If the remainder is 1 then the second left digit of the 4-digit integer is odd and the 4-digit integer can be added to the array, otherwise do not add it. Repeat for all n numbers.
That really depends on the programming language. In Java, it is sufficient to concatenate it with a String: int myNumber = 5; result = "" + myNumber; Other languages may require a special function, or method, to convert from integer to string.