Welcome to the Treehouse Community
Want to collaborate on code errors? Have bugs you need feedback on? Looking for an extra set of eyes on your latest project? Get support with fellow developers, designers, and programmers of all backgrounds and skill levels here with the Treehouse Community! While you're at it, check out some resources Treehouse students have shared here.
Looking to learn something new?
Treehouse offers a seven day free trial for new students. Get access to thousands of hours of content and join thousands of Treehouse students and alumni in the community today.
Start your free trialchailatte
941 PointsProgram doesn't say that I won when I guessed the secret word
Something about my code is different from the one in the video. Even though I correctly guessed the secret word, the program does not print the 'You win...' line. I checked that part of the code as well as the code for the rest of the program, but can't seem to identify the error. Everything else seems to work OK though.
Note: This is not an issue with the one described in the teacher's notes - words with the same letter appearing more than once. It is an issue even for words without repeated letters.
UPDATE: Ran my code in Python tutor to visualize all steps and it worked fine. Could this be a software issue on Treehouse's end?
import random
# make a list of words
words = [
'apple',
'banana',
'orange',
'strawberry',
'lime',
'grapefruit',
'lemon',
'kumquat',
'blueberry',
'melon'
]
while True:
start = input("Press enter/return to start, or enter 'Q' to quit: ")
if start.lower() == 'q':
break
# pick a random word
secret_word = random.choice(words)
bad_guesses = []
good_guesses = []
while len(bad_guesses) < 7 and len(good_guesses) != len(list(secret_word)):
# draw guessed letters, spaces, and strikes
for letter in secret_word:
if letter in good_guesses:
print(letter, end='')
else:
print('_', end='')
print('')
print('Strikes: {}/7'.format(len(bad_guesses)))
print('')
# take guess
guess = input("Guess a letter: ").lower()
if len(guess) != 1:
print("You can only guess a single letter!")
continue
elif guess in bad_guesses or guess in good_guesses:
print("You've already guessed that letter!")
continue
elif not guess.isalpha():
print("You can only guess letters!")
continue
if guess in secret_word:
good_guesses.append(guess)
if len(good_guesses) == len(list(secret_word)):
print("You win! The word was {}.".format(secret_word))
break
else:
bad_guesses.append(guess)
else:
print("You didn't guess it. My secret word was {}.".format(secret_word))
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,236 PointsThis program worked for me when the word had no repeating letters.
This win detection strategy only works when all the letters are unique. But if you continue on with the course, this will be explained and a different strategy will replace this one which will work with repeated letters.