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Python Python Basics (2015) Python Data Types Use .split() and .join()

Ricky Ackerman
Ricky Ackerman
705 Points

Not sure where i'm going wrong with question 3. Please identify mistake. menu = "menu".format(display_menu)

Not sure where i'm going wrong with question 3. Please identify mistake.

banana.py
available = "banana split;hot fudge;cherry;malted;black and white"
sundaes = available.split(";")
menu = "Our available flavors are: {}."
display_menu = sundaes + ', '.join()
menu = "menu".format(display_menu)

2 Answers

K Cleveland
K Cleveland
21,839 Points

Hey! I would go through each part of what the challenge is asking you -- especially part 3: Combine the sundaes list into a new variable named display_menu, where each item in the list is rejoined together by a comma and a space (", ").

display_menu = sundaes + ', '.join()

What does this mean? Is this what you want? Good luck! :)

Ricky Ackerman
Ricky Ackerman
705 Points

That's the first part of the code which I did. It's the second part of the question I am having trouble with. See below

Then reassign the menu variable to use the existing variable and .format() to replace the placeholder with the new string in display_menu. If you're really brave, you can even accomplish this all on the same line where menu is currently being set.

K Cleveland
K Cleveland
21,839 Points

Hey!

display_menu = sundaes + ', '.join()

check out your syntax for using .join(). The join() needs something to join -- in this case, you want to join the strings in sundaes. How does join get that object to iterate over? If you write:

', '.join()

the method won't have anything to join. Hopefully this helps!

After that, look at this line:

menu = "menu".format(display_menu)

This will give an error as well, but I think you'll be able to see why that is (look at what you're trying to format). Good luck!