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Start your free trialCarina De Jager
1,779 PointsCan someone take a look at my code and tell me why it's returning none instead of 2?
I'm not quite sure why I'm getting a return of none.
# You can check for dictionary membership using the
# "key in dict" syntax from lists.
### Example
# my_dict = {'apples': 1, 'bananas': 2, 'coconuts': 3}
# my_list = ['apples', 'coconuts', 'grapes', 'strawberries']
# members(my_dict, my_list) => 2
my_dict = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
my_keys= ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
def members(my_dict, my_keys):
count = 0
for item in my_keys:
if item in my_dict.keys():
count += 1
2 Answers
Daniel Santos
34,969 PointsHi Carina,
If you do not specify the return keyword in a function, it will return None.
If you want to return the count you should do:
return count
inside of the function.
Hope this help.
-Dan
Hanley Chan
27,771 PointsHi,
You are missing your return statement.
def members(my_dict, my_keys):
count = 0
for item in my_keys:
if item in my_dict.keys():
count += 1
return count