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Start your free trialLuis Gutierrez
Python Development Techdegree Student 2,353 Pointshow can you fix an integer?
def x(data): cleaned = [] for user in data: fixed = {} fixed["int"]?
1 Answer
Travis Alstrand
Treehouse Project ReviewerHi Luis Gutierrez 👋
Without any context, I'm not really sure what it is you mean by this, are you trying to change a string of a number into an integer and store it in a dictionary? Then append that dictionary to a list?
If so, you can utilize int()
to change a string number to an integer type. For example...
num_string = "37"
cleaned_num = int(num_string)
print(type(cleaned_num))
This should show <class 'int'>
in the terminal after running.
I'm not sure what data
is being passed in but from the loop I assume it's some sort of iterable collection of "users".
def x(data): # is data a list of user name strings? strings of integers? a dictionary?
cleaned = [] # empty list I assume we'll append these new 'fixed' dictionaries to and return
for user in data:
fixed = {} # new dictionary I assume we'll add to `cleaned`
fixed["int"]? # this would be setting a Key in this `fixed` dictionary by the name of `int` but no value
To assign a Value to the fixed
dictionary's "int"
Key, you'll want to simply use the assignment operator =
with whatever logic that entails.
fixed["int"] = int(user)
Without knowing what data
is, I just threw this together as an example, I hope this helps, if not, please clarify what it is you're working with and what it is you're trying to achieve.
def clean_data(data):
cleaned = []
for num_string in data:
fixed = {}
fixed["int"] = int(num_string)
cleaned.append(fixed)
for num in cleaned:
print(num)
return cleaned
num_data = ["1", "24", "37"]
cleaned_numbers = clean_data(num_data)
This will print the following to the terminal
{'int': 1}
{'int': 24}
{'int': 37}