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Start your free trialCraig Steward
9,100 PointsWondering why this piece of code doesn't work as intended?
Hi,
I'm curious as to why what I've written here doesn't work as I'd like?
The result still leaves False in the list. Is this because False is effectively 0 so therefore isinstance() sees False as an int?
I've already solved the challenge with other code, however I'd like to understand why this method doesn't quite work.
messy_list = ["a", 2, 3, 1, False, [1, 2, 3]]
messy_list.insert(0, messy_list.pop(3))
for item in messy_list:
if not isinstance(item, int):
messy_list.remove(item)
# Your code goes below here
1 Answer
Steve Hunter
57,712 PointsI think you're correct, yes. I ran this in the shell - isinstance
returns True
:
Python 3.6.1 (v3.6.1:69c0db5, Mar 21 2017, 17:54:52) [MSC v.1900 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "copyright", "credits" or "license()" for more information.
>>> isinstance(False, int)
True
Steve.
Steve Hunter
57,712 PointsSteve Hunter
57,712 PointsIt isn't a two-way street, though: