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Python Introducing Lists Build an Application Multidimensional Musical Groups

I am stuck.

I need help with this code

groups.py
musical_groups = [
    ["Ad Rock", "MCA", "Mike D."],
    ["John Lennon", "Paul McCartney", "Ringo Starr", "George Harrison"],
    ["Salt", "Peppa", "Spinderella"],
    ["Rivers Cuomo", "Patrick Wilson", "Brian Bell", "Scott Shriner"],
    ["Chuck D.", "Flavor Flav", "Professor Griff", "Khari Winn", "DJ Lord"],
    ["Axl Rose", "Slash", "Duff McKagan", "Steven Adler"],
    ["Run", "DMC", "Jam Master Jay"],
]
# Your code here
musical_groups = input(", ")

1 Answer

Chris Freeman
MOD
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,454 Points

Hey Harjan Anand, let's see if we can walk through the challenge.

Here is a multi-dimensional list of musical groups. The first dimension is group, the second is group members.

The first dimension is the group. This means it could have been written as:

group1 =  ["Ad Rock", "MCA", "Mike D."],
group2 = ["John Lennon", "Paul McCartney", "Ringo Starr", "George Harrison"],
group3 = ["Salt", "Peppa", "Spinderella"],
group 4 = ["Rivers Cuomo", "Patrick Wilson", "Brian Bell", "Scott Shriner"],
group 5 = ["Chuck D.", "Flavor Flav", "Professor Griff", "Khari Winn", "DJ Lord"],
group 6 = ["Axl Rose", "Slash", "Duff McKagan", "Steven Adler"],
group 7 = ["Run", "DMC", "Jam Master Jay"],
musical_groups = [group1, group2, group3, group4, group5, group6, group7]

Can you loop through each group and output the members joined together with a ", " comma space as a separator, please?

This by be better phrased as "can you loop through all the groups in musical_groups and print out each group members into a string using a comma and space as a separator."

Now you can see that a for loop over musical_groups and a print statement for each loop group would work nicely. In the form like:

for group in groups:
    print(", ".join(group))

The above isn’t the exact answer but should get you extremely close.

Post back if you need more help. Good luck!!

This is my code so far but i need help on what to do next:

musical_groups = [ ["Ad Rock", "MCA", "Mike D."], ["John Lennon", "Paul McCartney", "Ringo Starr", "George Harrison"], ["Salt", "Peppa", "Spinderella"], ["Rivers Cuomo", "Patrick Wilson", "Brian Bell", "Scott Shriner"], ["Chuck D.", "Flavor Flav", "Professor Griff", "Khari Winn", "DJ Lord"], ["Axl Rose", "Slash", "Duff McKagan", "Steven Adler"], ["Run", "DMC", "Jam Master Jay"], ] musical_groups = {}: for musical_groups in

for group in groups: print(β€œ, β€œ.join(group)) print()

this is my code and i know i am extremly close but i have no idea what to do next and when you tell i think i will understand.

Chris Freeman
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,454 Points

In should be group in musical_groups. I had given the form of the answer to see if you could grasp that the loop should iterate over musical_groups not groups.

I dont know why it says : SyntaxError: invalid character in identifier This is my code:

musical_groups = [
    ["Ad Rock", "MCA", "Mike D."],
    ["John Lennon", "Paul McCartney", "Ringo Starr", "George Harrison"],
    ["Salt", "Peppa", "Spinderella"],
    ["Rivers Cuomo", "Patrick Wilson", "Brian Bell", "Scott Shriner"],
    ["Chuck D.", "Flavor Flav", "Professor Griff", "Khari Winn", "DJ Lord"],
    ["Axl Rose", "Slash", "Duff McKagan", "Steven Adler"],
    ["Run", "DMC", "Jam Master Jay"],
]
# Your code here
for group in musical_groups:
    print(β€œ, β€œ.join(group))
Chris Freeman
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,454 Points

The code parser doesn’t like the stylized quotation marks. It sees it as print(Ò€œ, Ò€œ.join(group)) due to the non-ASCII or non UTF-8 characters for quotes.

This is referred to as β€œMojibake”, garbled text that is the result of text being decoded using an unintended character encoding. The result is a systematic replacement of symbols with completely unrelated ones, often from a different writing system.