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I've looked at other post about this same issue and can't find the answer. My code is exactly like the class online (both below, but I did shorten up the directories). Why is it working for the instructor and not me?


Below is my code:

from matplotlib import pyplot

data = open("lifeexpectanciesusa.txt", "r").readlines()

dates = [ ]

malelife = [ ]
femalelife = [ ]

for line in data:
    date, malelife, femalelife = line.split(",")
    dates.append(date)
    malelife.append(malelife)
    femalelife.append(femalelife)

pyplot.plot(dates, malelife,"bo-", label="Men")
pyplot.plot(dates, femalelife, "mo-", label="Female")

pyplot.legend(loc="upper left")
pyplot.xlabel("Year")
pyplot.ylabel("Age")
pyplot.title("Life Expectancies for men and woman in the USA over time")

pyplot.show()

Below is what the instructor has: Instructor code


The error message I get is :

pyplot.show()
Traceback (most recent call last):

File "<ipython-input-56-0283726
068cb>", line 12, in <module>
malelife.append(malelife)

AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'append'

1 Answer 1

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You can't have two variables of the same name in the same scope. Either malelife is a list, or it's a string; it can't be both "John" and [] at the same time. You want to append the malelife string into the malelife list; but in fact, there's just one malelife, and at that time it's a string. Rename one of them (similarly for femalelife) and the problem will go away.

Note that the instructor had distinct variable names; the two versions are not the same as you claim. Your "shortening" is the problem. If one version works and the other doesn't, you should look to what you changed to find what the problem was.

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  • Hey Amadan, I just saw that...after spending almost an hr. looking at the code! I was looking at trying to delete the post so i didn't look too stupid!
    – Pink
    Oct 4, 2019 at 9:53
  • No worries, everyone has a brain fart now and then, and I especially include myself...
    – Amadan
    Oct 4, 2019 at 9:54
  • But the interesting thing...is that the professors plotting has a exponential distribution where as mine is very linear.
    – Pink
    Oct 4, 2019 at 9:54
  • That is a different question, please ask it as such (after trying to figure it for yourself).
    – Amadan
    Oct 4, 2019 at 9:55

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