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895 PointsI keep getting a TypeError: 'str' object is not callable. How can I fix the code? Thanks.
"""
This is importing a function named `tweet` from a file
that we unfortunately don't have access to change.
You use it like so:
>>> tweet("Hello this is my tweet")
If the function cannot connect to Twitter,
the function will raise a `CommunicationError`
If the message is too long,
the function will raise a `MessageTooLongError`
"""
from twitter import (
tweet,
MessageTooLongError,
CommunicationError,
)
message = input("What would you like to tweet? ")
try:
tweet(message)
except CommunicationError:
print("An error occurred attempting to connect to Twitter. Please try again!")
try:
message(42)
except MessageTooLongError as err:
print("Oh no! Your message was too long (...)".format(err))
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,248 PointsSince "message" is created with an "input", it contains a string. Then "message(42)
" is interpreted by the system as an attempt to call the string, which is not allowed.
But you don't need a second "try" at all, because one "try" can have multiple "except" statements follow it.
And one other thing: where the instructions have "..." they don't want actual dots, but they want you to insert the captured "except" message there.