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Start your free trialManik Mehta
Courses Plus Student 2,729 Pointswhat am i doing wrong?
please check my code
class Vehicle {
var numberOfDoors: Int
var numberOfWheels: Int
init(withDoors doors: Int, andWheels wheels: Int) {
self.numberOfDoors = doors
self.numberOfWheels = wheels
}
}
// Enter your code below
class Car: Vehicle {
var numberOfSeats: Int
override init(withDoors doors: Int, andWheels wheels: Int) {
self.numberOfSeats = 4
super.init(withDoors: doors, andWheels: wheels)
}
let someCar = Car(withDoors: 2, andWheels: 4)
2 Answers
Michael Hulet
47,913 PointsYour problem is a simple one that even the most experienced programmers make all the time. All you did was forget a closing bracket. Specifically, you never closed the initializer that you overrode, so if you put a closing bracket at the end of that method, your code should no longer produce a syntax error
christopherliudahl
Courses Plus Student 4,516 Pointsalso need to fix the super.init line to include the Ints instead of the local names. super.init(withDoors: 4, withWheels: 4) that along with above remarks will pass the challenge