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Start your free trialSean Coutinho
7,788 PointsShould'nt I use super() and assign 20 to the variable sides?
Should'nt I use super() and assign 20 to the variable sides?
import random
class Die:
def __init__(self, sides=2):
if sides < 2:
raise ValueError("Can't have fewer than two sides")
self.sides = sides
self.value = random.randint(1, sides)
def __int__(self):
return self.value
def __add__(self, other):
return int(self) + other
def __radd__(self, other):
return self + other
class D20(Die):
def __init__(self, size=20)
super().__init__()
class Hand(list):
@property
def total(self):
return sum(self)
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,269 PointsYou already have the call to "super", but there are other issues:
- the word "class" is indented one space (but should not be)
- the colon that should end the "def" line is missing
- you need to pass "size" as an argument when calling the super's __init__ method