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Start your free trialAnthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsWhat's going on? Everything is working perfectly fine in the Workspace but the challange throws a bummer at me...
In the challange it says that my code returns wrong teacher name, but I've checked that in my Workspace with plenty of examples and it's working absolutely perfect. What's going on? Maybe if for example there are two teachers with most courses I should return both of them?
# The dictionary will look something like:
# {'Andrew Chalkley': ['jQuery Basics', 'Node.js Basics'],
# 'Kenneth Love': ['Python Basics', 'Python Collections']}
#
# Each key will be a Teacher and the value will be a list of courses.
#
# Your code goes below here.
def num_teachers(some_object):
return len(some_object.keys())
def num_courses(some_object):
list_values = [v for v in some_object.values()]
index = 0
lol = 0
while True:
try:
a = len(list_values[index])
lol += a
del list_values[index]
continue
except IndexError:
break
return lol
def courses(some_object):
list_values_2 = [v for v in some_object.values()]
pure_list = []
index = 0
while True:
try:
pure_list.extend(list_values_2[index])
index += 1
continue
except IndexError:
break
return pure_list
def most_courses(dic):
maxcount = 0
for teacher, courses in dic.items():
if len(courses) > maxcount:
maxcount = len(courses)
for value in dic.values():
if len(value) == maxcount:
mc = value
# Defining the teachers name
for key, value_ in dic.items():
if mc == value_:
name = key
teacher = name.split()
teacher_name = teacher[0]
return teacher_name
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsThe instructions say the function "should return the name of the teacher" (which would be a string), but this code seems to be returning a dictionary.
But it also looks like there's a strategy issue, where the code converts the original dictionary into separate lists of teachers and courses and assumes the index numbers will correspond. But dictionaries are orderless by definition, so it's never safe to make any assumptions about what order the keys or the values will appear in.
Using the challenge's suggestion of keeping track of a count as you iterate through the original dictionary would avoid this issue and probably be simpler to implement as well.
Anthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsAnthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsThanks! Will implement these advices asap and post the final code!
Anthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsAnthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsBut also look - I convert a dict to a list at the beggining of the def - "list_values = [v for v in dic.values()]", so the list remains the same trough the whole code. I don't really see the problem here that you pointed out. It pretty much does't matter in my opinion in what order they will come. Maybe I'm getting something wrong?
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsSteven Parker
231,275 PointsYes, you create a list from the values. Later, after you determine which set of values are the largest, you determine what index that set occupies in the list. Then, you use that index to access a name from another list that was independently created from the original dict. There's no guarantee that the order of the names list will be in the same order as the values list.
You could create both lists at the same time using dict.items(), but that's still more work than the strategy suggested by the challenge.
Anthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsAnthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsI don't quite get where I used that index to access a name from another list. In teacher = (list(dic.keys())[list(dic.values()).index(list_values[0])]) I just search for the key corresponding to the greatest set of value. Also i don't understand what is max count variable...
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsSteven Parker
231,275 PointsThe list created by "
list(dic.keys())
" is a list of names, and is completely separate from the list of courses made with "list(dic.values())
". Since both lists are made from an orderless collection, there's no guarantee that any correspondence between them will exist. So your search will always find something, but it may not be the right name for those courses.And a "max count variable" would just be one where you keep track of the largest count seen so far. For example:
Anthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsAnthony Grodowski
4,902 PointsI've Implemented your hints, again it returns right teacher name each time I test it, but still I get a bummer... What's wrong?
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsSteven Parker
231,275 PointsYou don't need to "split" the name, just return the teacher's whole name.
And while that will work, you can simplify the process a good bit by saving the "teacher" any time you update "maxcount". Then you have the answer as soon as the first loop finishes.