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Start your free trialEllie Henry
1,521 PointsWhy does this work in IDLE, but not on here?
I am working on the time_tango question in the Dates and Times module. I always write my code out in IDLE first and test it there, then paste it over into the code section here. My code runs fine in IDLE, but it fails here, and doesn't give me a reason, just "Bummer! Try again.". Here is my code for it.
import datetime def time_tango(date, time): new_date = date + " " + time my_datetime = datetime.datetime.strptime(new_date, "%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S") return(my_datetime)
import datetime
def time_tango(date, time):
new_date = date + " " + time
my_datetime = datetime.datetime.strptime(new_date, "%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S")
return(my_datetime)
1 Answer
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,457 PointsIn the challenge, the date
and time
are datetime
objects, not strings. So trying when the code concatenates them, it is converting them to a string, then using strptime
the code generates a new datetime
object. This can be all done with the datetime.combine
method:
# Task 1 of 1
# Write a function named 'time_tango' that takes a 'date' and a 'time'.
# It should combine them into a datetime and return it.
import datetime
def time_tango(date, time):
return datetime.datetime.combine(date, time)