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Start your free trialIván Higuera-Mendieta
764 PointsDictionaries Code Challenge
I am sucked at the first Dictionaries Code Challenge. I have been trying the following code:
def members(my_dict, my_list):
for item in my_list:
if key in my_dict:
count = 0
count += key
else:
count = count
return count
My intention is to make a count for every item in the list of keys, and this count only will sum if that item is a key in my dictionary, else, this count will be the same.
Am I doing a horrible mistake here?
Thanks in advance.
3 Answers
William Li
Courses Plus Student 26,868 PointsYou should move the count
variable outside of the loop, also you can simplify the code a little bit
def members(my_dict, my_list):
count = 0
for key in my_dict:
if key in my_list:
count += 1
return count
shezazr
8,275 Pointswhat you are doing with count is nonsensical in my opinion..
btw i think you may need to do: if key in my_dict.keys(): (notice the .keys() at the end!)
Iván Higuera-Mendieta
764 PointsThanks both for the feedback.
I run the code just as William wrote it, it works perfectly. Nonetheless, when you use the if condition, don't you need to use the else condition as well?
shez azr, which approach do you recommend me? I know there is several ways to respond to this challenges.
William Li
Courses Plus Student 26,868 PointsYou can use if
alone without else
.