On 1/26/21 10:19 PM, C W wrote: > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/Users/Mike/Documents/Mike/main.py", line 95, in <module> > main() > File "/Users/Mike/Documents/Mike/main.py", line 86, in main > args = get_feed() > File "/Users/Mike/DocumentsMike/main.py", line 32, in get_feed > result = [PERSONatabase.get_person(raw_person) for raw_neo in > raw_objects] > File "/Users/Mike/Documents/Mike/main.py", line 32, in <listcomp> > result = [NEODatabase.get_person(raw_person) for raw_neo in > raw_objects] > File "/Users/Mike/Documents/Mike/database.py", line 24, in get_person > return PERSONDatabase(person['created_at'], > KeyError: 'created_at'
The actual error is the last part, which is a KeyError on line 24. A key error usually is from a dictionary-like object and it means the requested key is not found in that object. In other words, this person object has no "created_at" key. Hope that makes sense. I do not know why the code you posted refers to "employee" but the traceback refers to "person." In any case the trace back shows you what called what until the error occurred. You can trace the execution of the code simply by following it. main() called get_feed() which set up a list comprehension, which calls get_person() which is where the error is occurring. I'm not following the list comprehension stuff; I don't know why python is first referring to PERSONatabase and then refers to NEODatabase. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list