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Start your free trialJulian Cardona
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 4,894 PointsNot responding
I'm having trouble solving the challenge. class Letter: def init(self, pattern=None): self.pattern = pattern
def __iter__(self):
yield from self.pattern
def __str__(self):
output = []
for blip in self:
if blip == '.':
output.append('dot')
else:
output.append('dash')
return '-'.join(output)
@classmethod
def from_string(cls, output):
sep = []
new_out = []
for i in output:
together = i.split('-')
for i in together:
if i == 'dot':
new_out.append('.')
else:
new_out.append('_')
return cls(new_out)
class S(Letter): def init(self): pattern = ['.', '.', '.'] super().init(pattern)
class Letter:
def __init__(self, pattern=None):
self.pattern = pattern
def __iter__(self):
yield from self.pattern
def __str__(self):
output = []
for blip in self:
if blip == '.':
output.append('dot')
else:
output.append('dash')
return '-'.join(output)
@classmethod
def from_string(cls,pattern):
pattern = Letter(pattern)
return cls(pattern)
class S(Letter):
def __init__(self):
pattern = ['.', '.', '.']
super().__init__(pattern)
2 Answers
AJ Salmon
5,675 PointsHey Julian,
The first for loop in your class method is unnecessary. Get rid of the loop, and then assign output.split('-') to the variable together, and it should pass!
@classmethod
def from_string(cls, output):
#you also had an empty list "sep" here, that wasn't needed either!
new_out = []
together = output.split('-')
for i in together:
if i == 'dot':
new_out.append('.')
else:
new_out.append('_')
return cls(new_out)
Hope this helps, and happy coding!
Julian Cardona
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 4,894 PointsThe reason i used the first loop was that the argument output is a list, which i want to rid of '-'.
AJ Salmon
5,675 PointsYes, but you can do this in one step! Your loop is looping through the initial argument, but the argument is a string, so you can can simply .split() it on the hyphen once. There's no need to loop through it. Example:
>>> output = 'dash-dot-dot-dash-dash'
>>> together = output.split('-')
>>> together
['dash', 'dot', 'dot', 'dash', 'dash']
Splitting the string on the hyphen creates the list that you need, without looping through it :)
Julian Cardona
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 4,894 PointsJulian Cardona
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 4,894 PointsAJ Salmon This is the challenge: Let's practice using @classmethod! Create a class method in Letter named from_string that takes a string like "dash-dot" and creates an instance with the correct pattern (['_', '.']).