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Start your free trialFaisal Rana
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 2,008 PointsWhat is wrong with my code ! I'm stuck here !
Here is the 2nd task of the challenge. Create a new function named covers_all that takes a single set as an argument. Return the names of all of the courses, in a list, where all of the topics in the supplied set are covered.
For example, covers_all({"conditions", "input"}) would return ["Python Basics", "Ruby Basics"]. Java Basics and PHP Basics would be excluded because they don't include both of those topics.
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(a_set_of_topics):
list_of_courses = []
for course in COURSES:
if a_set_of_topics.intersection(COURSES[course]):
list_of_courses.append(course)
return list_of_courses
def covers_all(x):
new_list = []
for course in COURSES.keys():
if course.pop("Java Basics", "PHP Basics"):
new_list.append(course.keys())
return(new_list)
1 Answer
frankgenova
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 15,616 PointsSPOILER ALERT - See comments first. Answer below,
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(topic_set):
course_has_topics_list = []
for course in COURSES:
# print("course: {}".format(course))
topics = COURSES[course]
# print("COURSES[{}]: {}".format(course, topics))
if topics.intersection(topic_set):
# print("topics intersects topic_set: {} {} \n{}".format(topics, topic_set, topics.intersection(topic_set)))
course_has_topics_list.append(course)
else:
continue
# print("no intersection between: {} {}".format(topics, topic_set))
return course_has_topics_list
def covers_all(topic_set):
course_has_all_topics_list = []
for course in COURSES:
topics = COURSES[course]
if topic_set <= topics:
course_has_all_topics_list.append(course)
else:
# print(topic_set <= topics)
continue
return course_has_all_topics_list
# print(covers({"Python"}))
print(covers_all({"conditions", "input"}))
frankgenova
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 15,616 Pointsfrankgenova
Python Web Development Techdegree Student 15,616 PointsSPOILER ALERT - See comments first. Answer below,
You can make use of the subset comparison here.