Created
January 21, 2014 20:13
-
-
Save rsayers/8547480 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
After searching for a library to spell out the names of integers, I decided to roll my own. Its far easier than I expected
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
def name(n): | |
onesteens = ['one','two','three','four','five','six','seven','eight','nine','ten','eleven','twelve','thirteen','fourteen','fifteen','sixteen','seventeen','eighteen','nineteen'] | |
tens = ['twenty','thirty','forty','fifty','sixty','seventy','eighty','ninety'] | |
if n < 20: | |
return onesteens[n-1] | |
if n > 19 and n < 100: | |
dm = divmod(n,10) | |
ret = tens[ int((n/10)-2) ] | |
if dm[1]==0: | |
return ret | |
return "%s-%s" % (ret, name(dm[1])) | |
if n>99 and n<1000: | |
dm = divmod(n,100) | |
if dm[1]==0: | |
return "%s hundred" % name(dm[0]) | |
return "%s hundred and %s" % (name(dm[0]), name(dm[1])) | |
if n>999: | |
dm = divmod(n,1000) | |
if dm[1]==0: | |
return "%s thousand" % name(dm[0]) | |
return "%s thousand %s" % (name(dm[0]), name(dm[1])) | |
for i in range(1000): | |
print(name(i+1)) |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment