Welcome to the Treehouse Community
Want to collaborate on code errors? Have bugs you need feedback on? Looking for an extra set of eyes on your latest project? Get support with fellow developers, designers, and programmers of all backgrounds and skill levels here with the Treehouse Community! While you're at it, check out some resources Treehouse students have shared here.
Looking to learn something new?
Treehouse offers a seven day free trial for new students. Get access to thousands of hours of content and join thousands of Treehouse students and alumni in the community today.
Start your free trialDisha De
686 PointsYou're doing great! Just one more task but it's a bigger one. Right now, we turn everything into a float.
You're doing great! Just one more task but it's a bigger one.
Right now, we turn everything into a float. That's great so long as we're getting numbers or numbers as a string. We should handle cases where we get a non-number, though.
Add a try block before where you turn your arguments into floats.
Then add an except to catch the possible ValueError. Inside the except block, return None.
If you're following the structure from the videos, add an else: for your final return of the added floats
def add(n1, n2)
try:
a = float(n1)
b = float(n2)
except ValueError:
return None
else:
return True
1 Answer
andren
28,558 PointsThere are two issues:
- You are missing a colon : after your function declaration
- In the
else
block you are meant to return the result of adding the two numbers together, you are just returning the BooleanTrue
.
If you add the colon and add the two numbers together like this:
def add(n1, n2): # <- Added :
try:
a = float(n1)
b = float(n2)
except ValueError:
return None
else:
return a + b # Return two numbers added together
Then your code will pass.