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Start your free trialPeter S
3,406 PointsPython-OOP: Why does the bummer says: "Oh no! You forgot a 'self' argument in your praise method"?
Task: "This class should look familiar!
I need you to add a method name praise. The method should return a positive message about the student which includes the name attribute. As an example, it could say "You're doing a great job, Jacinta!" or "I really like your hair today, Michael!".
Feel free to change the name attribute to your own name, too!"
The code does work - it prints out result in a terminal, but when running 'Check work', there's this bummer: "Oh no! You forgot a 'self' argument in you praise method". Can anyone tell me what am I doing wrong?
class Student:
name = "Steve"
def __init__(self, name):
self.name = name
def praise(self):
return 'You are doing a great job, {}!'.format(self.name)
steve = Student('Steve')
print(steve.praise())
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,248 PointsThe message is a bit misleading (you managed to confuse the evaluation!), but the issue is that you're doing things that are not part of the instructions. In particular:
- you don't need to add an "
__init__
" method - you don't need to create an object instance
- you don't need to "print" anything
The definition of the new method is good and will pass when you remove the extra stuff.
Peter S
3,406 PointsPeter S
3,406 PointsOh, now it worked. Thank you very much!