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Start your free trialMalcolm Aldrin Masumba
3,689 PointsWhere am I going wrong on this, exhausted all my knowledge
Which part of my code is off
class Student:
name = "Your Name"
def praise(self):
return "You inspire me, {}".format(self.name)
def reassurance(self):
return "Chin up, {}. You'll get it next time!".format(self.name)
def feedback(self, grade):
if grade => 50:
return "You are doing great," + self.name + "!"
else:
return "Chin up, {}. You'll get it next time!".format(self.name)
2 Answers
Steven Parker
231,269 PointsThe symbols "=>" are not a Python comparison operator, but since the instructions say to show praise "If grade is above 50", the test should not include "equal" in any case.
Also, you already have functions to generate the messages. Instead of replicating what they do, you can just call them.
Malcolm Aldrin Masumba
3,689 PointsOk I rectified that but am getting this error (Exception: name 'praise' is not defined) unless am calling the function wrongly (return praise() )
Steven Parker
231,269 PointsWhen referencing an internal method, you need to prefix the name with "self.
".