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Start your free trialBozhong Tao
18,365 PointsBummer! Exception: argument of type 'NoneType' is not iterable
Hi , could someone help with this one? if I delete the grade var in the beginning, it will prompt that "AttributeError, student object has no attribute 'grade'"
however, if I set a grade attribute, the input will always be the number I set in the first place rather than my input when I run the code in workspace. :(
some help will be appreciated, many thanks!
class Student:
name = "bozhonge"
grade = 0
def praise(self):
return "You inspire me, {}".format(self.name)
def reassurance(self):
return "Chin up. You'll get it next time!".format(self.name)
def feedback(self, grade):
if self.grade > 50:
self.praise()
if self.grade <= 50:
self.reassurance()
2 Answers
Steven Parker
231,248 PointsI assume you are referring to this part of the code:
def feedback(self, grade):
if self.grade > 50:
# ...
Note that "self.grade" refers to the value stored in the class, but the parameter named "grade" is not being used.
To test the value given to the "feedback" method, use this instead:
if grade > 50:
Or, if your intention was to change the stored value and then test it:
def feedback(self, grade):
self.grade = grade
# ...
But either way, I suspect this is not related to your error message "argument of type 'NoneType' is not iterable". That message probably refers to a loop or membership operator, but I don't see either in this code.
Bozhong Tao
18,365 PointsYour explained it super clear and easy to understand. Both suggestions solved my problem, thank you Steven! :)
Mark Nembhard
1,387 PointsMark Nembhard
1,387 PointsI got stuck on this just now. i thought the convention is to use the instance of the attribute or function in which case you always use the instance.attribute as in self.grade to refer to the attribute. I do understand you can use the class name and then the function with a name in the function parenthesis. Man i just need to get my head around this. Taking too much time