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Start your free trialKirome Thompson
5,350 PointsHelp writing a time_machine function that takes an int and a string of 'minutes', 'hours', 'days' or 'years'
Write a function named time_machine that takes an integer and a string of "minutes", "hours", "days", or "years". This describes a timedelta. Return a datetime that is the timedelta's duration from the starter datetime.
import datetime
starter = datetime.datetime(2015, 10, 21, 16, 29)
# Remember, you can't set "years" on a timedelta!
# Consider a year to be 365 days.
## Example
# time_machine(5, "minutes") => datetime(2015, 10, 21, 16, 34)
def time_machine(num, time):
if time == 'years':
time = 'days'
num = 365
return starter + datetime.timedelta(**{time: num})
1 Answer
Louise St. Germain
19,424 PointsHi Kirome,
I think the issue is that if the user submits "years" to your function, you've hard-coded the number of days to 365, no matter how many years they specify. It should work if you use: num *= 365 (multiply the original num by 365 to turn years into days) instead of just num = 365.
Hope it works after this!
Kirome Thompson
5,350 PointsKirome Thompson
5,350 PointsHi Louise,
Thanks very much for the helped it worked! :)
I appreciate it