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Start your free trialRichard Jones
3,500 PointsStuck on Frog Tongues. I am getting compile errors that don't show up in Visual Studio.
Hi, Can someone give my code a second peek? It says I have compile errors and I am not sure why. Thank you!
using System;
namespace Treehouse.CodeChallenges
{
class FrogStats
{
public static double GetAverageTongueLength(Frog[] frogs)
{
double sumTongues = 0.0;
double result = 0.0;
for (int i = 0; i < frogs.Length; i++)
{
sumTongues += double.Parse(frogs[i]);
}
result = sumTongues / frogs.Length;
return result;
}
}
}
namespace Treehouse.CodeChallenges
{
public class Frog
{
public int TongueLength { get; }
public Frog(int tongueLength)
{
TongueLength = tongueLength;
}
}
}
3 Answers
Steven Parker
231,269 PointsYou're pretty close, but...
- you don't need double.Parse because the lengths are already numbers (not strings)
- you can't add the frog itself, you need to select the TongueLength property
Richard Jones
3,500 PointsOh, I thought I understood objects, Now I am not sure how to grab a ToungeLength property out of the object Frogs[].
Steven Parker
231,269 PointsThe "dot notation" is a most common way to select a property: "objectname.propertyname
". Or in this case, since you're also selecting an object from an array with an index: "objectarrayname[index].propertyname
".
And don't forget your object array is frogs (with a lower-case "f").
Richard Jones
3,500 PointsThank you, Steven. I changed my sumTongues to an int so I didn't have to convert, I then accessed the toungueLength as you stated. Finally, divided as before and made it a double called result. Worked. I guess when you divide two ints and the answer is a double you can use double.