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Start your free trialMatt Wolf
2,225 PointsThis is totally working for me, not sure why Treehouse says it's wrong.
Works when I run it
COURSES = {
"Python Basics": {"Python", "functions", "variables",
"booleans", "integers", "floats",
"arrays", "strings", "exceptions",
"conditions", "input", "loops"},
"Java Basics": {"Java", "strings", "variables",
"input", "exceptions", "integers",
"booleans", "loops"},
"PHP Basics": {"PHP", "variables", "conditions",
"integers", "floats", "strings",
"booleans", "HTML"},
"Ruby Basics": {"Ruby", "strings", "floats",
"integers", "conditions",
"functions", "input"}
}
def covers(setoftopics):
finalset = set({})
for key in COURSES.keys():
if setoftopics <= COURSES[key]:
finalset.add(key)
return list(finalset)
1 Answer
Stuart Wright
41,120 PointsI don't know what <= means in the context of sets, but when I replace it with the symbol for set intersection (&), the code passes for me:
def covers(setoftopics):
finalset = set({})
for key in COURSES.keys():
if setoftopics & COURSES[key]:
finalset.add(key)
return list(finalset)
Matt Wolf
2,225 PointsMatt Wolf
2,225 PointsThanks Stuart. <= means subset but I'll make the change. I think it should be correct, but anyway...
Stuart Wright
41,120 PointsStuart Wright
41,120 PointsAh good to know about subset, hadn't used that before.
The instructions say:
"Have the function return a list of courses from COURSES where the supplied set and the course's value (also a set) overlap."
So I think the reason it doesn't pass is that the challenge wants you to return keys where either set is a subset of the other, rather than only where the input set is a subset of the COURSES set.
Stuart Wright
41,120 PointsStuart Wright
41,120 PointsOn second thoughts, two sets can still overlap with neither being a subset of the other. For example:
{1, 2} {2, 3}