
In programming, data type is an important concept.
Variables can store data of different types, and different types can do different things.
Python has the following data types built-in by default, in these categories:
strint, float, complexlist, tuple, rangedictset, frozensetboolbytes, bytearray, memoryviewNoneTypeYou can get the data type of any object by using the type() function:
Print the data type of the variable x:
x = 5
print(type(x))
In Python, the data type is set when you assign a value to a variable:
| Example | Data Type | Try it |
|---|---|---|
| x = "Hello World" | str | |
| x = 20 | int | |
| x = 20.5 | float | |
| x = 1j | complex | |
| x = ["apple", "banana", "cherry"] | list | |
| x = ("apple", "banana", "cherry") | tuple | |
| x = range(6) | range | |
| x = {"name" : "John", "age" : 36} | dict | |
| x = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"} | set | |
| x = frozenset({"apple", "banana", "cherry"}) | frozenset | |
| x = True | bool | |
| x = b"Hello" | bytes | |
| x = bytearray(5) | bytearray | |
| x = memoryview(bytes(5)) | memoryview | |
| x = None | NoneType |