Lucas Sampaio added the comment:
ok, I got it
lista4 = input().split()
print(lista4)
lista4.sort()
print(lista4)
print(type(lista4[2]))
6 8 10['6', '8', '10']
['10', '6', '8']
ok, I got it
2018-07-01 18:05 GMT-03:00 Tim Peters :
>
> Tim Peters added the comment:
>
> Lucas, as Mark
Tim Peters added the comment:
Lucas, as Mark said you're sorting _strings_ here, not sorting integers.
Please study his reply. As strings, "10" is less than "9", because "1" is less
than "9".
>>> "10" < "9"
True
>>> 10 < 9
False
--
nosy: +tim.peters
Lucas Sampaio added the comment:
same code with another input
type is list
lista4 = input().split()
print(lista4)
lista4.sort()
print(lista4)
6 8 9
['6', '8', '9']
['6', '8', '9']
lista4 = input().split()
print(lista4)
lista4.sort()
print(lista4)
10 11 12
['10', '11', '12']
['10',
Mark Dickinson added the comment:
This isn't a bug: I'm guessing that you expected an output of `['6', '8',
'10']`, but in the example you give you're sorting strings rather than numbers,
and those strings are sorted lexicographically (i.e., using "dictionary order")
as normal.
If you want
New submission from Lucas Sampaio :
lista4 = input().split()
print(lista4)
lista4.sort()
print(lista4)
Input = 6 8 10
Output:
6 8 10
['6', '8', '10']
['10', '6', '8']
a bug occurs when setting the 10
--
messages: 320843
nosy: lucassdssampaio
priority: normal
severity: normal