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Start your free trialEran Artzi
4,280 PointsI'm trying to complete this Python db challenge
I've created inside the function new_challenge as an instance of Challenge by doing so: new_challenge = Challenge()
and than assigned the different arguments of the function
What am I doing wrong?
from models import Challenge
def create_challenge(name, language, steps=1):
new_challenge = Challenge()
new_challenge.name = name
new_challenge.language = language
new_challenge.steps = steps
2 Answers
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsHey Eran,
I wouldn't say you are doing anything wrong. Your code is missing one crucial step: the save!
from models import Challenge
def create_challenge(name, language, steps=1):
new_challenge = Challenge()
new_challenge.name = name
new_challenge.language = language
new_challenge.steps = steps
new_challenge.save() # <-- you gotta save it!
Ken Alger's solution, using the class create()
method, is correct and the more common style to use when creating a new instance that you want to save immediately to the database. The create()
method calls __init__
and save()
for you.
There are times when you do not want to immediate save the instance to the database, such as, when working with Django forms. or if you need to perform additional initialization not covered in the class constructor __init__()
method. In these cases, as you did, you can create a local instance, adjust the attributes, then call the class save()
method.
Ken Alger
Treehouse TeacherEran;
In the course there is an example of creating a Student
using the create()
method. We can do something similar here to create a Challenge
.
from models import Challenge
def create_challenge(name, language, steps=1):
Challenge.create(name=name, language=language, steps=steps)
Post back if you are still stuck or have additional questions.
Happy coding,
Ken