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Python Python Collections (Retired) Dictionaries Word Count

Phoebe Li
Phoebe Li
2,278 Points

getting 'bummer! If' error and not sure what it means

not sure why code isn't passing

word_count.py
# E.g. word_count("I am that I am") gets back a dictionary like:
# {'i': 2, 'am': 2, 'that': 1}
# Lowercase the string to make it easier.
# Using .split() on the sentence will give you a list of words.
# In a for loop of that list, you'll have a word that you can
# check for inclusion in the dict (with "if word in dict"-style syntax).
# Or add it to the dict with something like word_dict[word] = 1.

def word_count(arg):
  string = arg.split()
  my_dict = {}
  for word in string:
    if my_dict[word]:
      my_dict[word] = my_dict[word]+1
    else:
      my_dict[word] = 1
  return my_dict

2 Answers

Anish Walawalkar
Anish Walawalkar
8,534 Points

remember to use the "in" keyword, this should solve your problem:

def word_count(sent):
    words = sent.split(' ')
    count_dict = {}
    for word in words: 
        if word in count_dict.keys():
            count_dict[word] += 1
        else:
            count_dict[word] = 1
    return count_dict
Brent Petit
Brent Petit
7,860 Points

Remember to use the "in" keyword syntax to determine whether a key is defined in the dictionary as you iterate over the words.