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Start your free trialPatrick Brusven
14,520 PointsMy function returns what the question is asking for, why is it not being accepted?
#combiner function takes a list and combines string type and sums integer and float types, returns as one string.
def combiner(lst):
#empty lists and string that for loops will use.
str_list = []
new_combined_str = ""
num_list = []
#this loop iterates through lst and pulls out element type string and puts them into str_list.
for i in lst:
if isinstance(i, str):
str_list.append(i)
#this loop interates through the str_list and concatenates them into one string.
for i in str_list:
new_combined_str += i
#this loop iterates through the list and pulls out elements type float and puts them into num_list.
for i in lst:
if isinstance(i, float):
num_list.append(i)
#This loop iterates through the list and pulls out elements type int and puts them into num_list.
for i in lst:
if isinstance(i, int):
num_list.append(i)
#sum all elements in num_list
num_list = sum(num_list)
#change num_list to type str and concatenate with new_combined_str
new_combined_str = new_combined_str+str(num_list)
return new_combined_str
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,271 PointsThe "isinstance" method will test more than one type at a time, so you could catch both kinds of number at the same time. You could also simplify things a bit by accumulating both strings and numbers in the same loop.
I don't why this would make a difference, but they did give a warning about being tricky. Beats me how, but if they manage to have something that passes the tests for both types, it would get counted twice using separate loops.