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Start your free trialryan smith
687 PointsWhy wont this work
def squared(argument):
try:
if argument == int(argument):
return(argument * argument)
except ValueError:
return(argument * len(argument))
ryan smith
687 PointsAnton Kamynin I figured it out but I'm just curious... this is what works
def squared(argument):
try:
argument = int(argument)
return(argument * argument)
except ValueError:
return(argument * len(argument))
but doesn't the following make sense... with == instead of = because = is assigning?
argument == int(argument)
1 Answer
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,454 PointsUsing double-equals is a comparison that yields a True/False value. Regardless of the comparison results, argument
is not altered. Then squared("5")
would raise an error in the multiplication and the result would be "5" (the string times it length) instead of 25.
Using the single-equals assigns the converted value to the local variable argument
that can be properly used in the multiplication.
Anton Kamynin
20,412 PointsAnton Kamynin
20,412 PointsHi, Ryan. You do not need to use if statement, because 'try' and 'except' are conditional statements by themself. If 'try' works - good. If it`s not - moving to except.
Use 'try' to return square of argument, like this:
try:
return int(argument) ** 2