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Start your free trialOtis Riege
2,260 PointsThis answer works perfectly on pycharm... what gives?
What gives? this code words perfectly on pycharm.
def word_count(x):
dic = {}
words = x.lower().split()
for word in words:
dic.update({word: words.count(word)})
return dic
3 Answers
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,457 PointsYou have a mix of spaces and tabs in your code indentation. The code challenges flag that as an error. I suggest only using spaces.
Otis Riege
2,260 PointsThanks Chris, but how did you know that just by looking at the code?
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,457 PointsI canβt necessarily βsee itβ. If i run your code as posted and it passes then it must be a hidden syntax issue. I then grab your code and run it in my local REPL. The inconsistent use error then pops up.
Some editors automatically correct indentation errors on a cut and paste.
Otis Riege
2,260 PointsOh ok that makes more sense. Just to reiterate, instead of using tab, I should use 4 spaces every time I want to indent a line of code?
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,457 PointsCorrect. 4 spaces over using Tabs