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Start your free trialGeorge Clement
2,816 Pointsnot sure what I'm missing but this works in my IDE >>> from noclass import S >>> S().from_string("dash-dot")
not sure why but this works in my IDE but not on the site
>>> from noclass import S
>>> S().from_string("dash-dot")
['_', '.']
I must be missing something
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, str):
output = []
for blip in str.split("-"):
if blip == "dot":
output.append('.')
if blip == "dash":
output.append('_')
return output
class S(Letter):
def __init__(self):
pattern = ['.', '.', '.', '.']
super().__init__(pattern)
1 Answer
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsYou are very close! The challenge asks that you return an instance of the class with the pattern extracted from the string. This can be done in your return statement:
return cls(output)
Also, it is not a good practice to used reserved words or built-in functions names as variable names. Best to use βstringβ instead of str
.
Post back if you need more help. Good luck!!!