curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/workshop-salary-tracker/68cab17ac51b861a8458c42d.md
Finally, now that you have completed the salary setter, you can call it within the level setter.
Modify the line self._salary = Employee._base_salaries[new_level] so that it calls the salary setter instead of modifying directly the _salary attribute.
With that the salary tracker workshop is complete.
You should set self.salary to Employee._base_salaries[new_level] within the level setter.
({ test: () => runPython(`
import io
import sys
captured_output = io.StringIO()
sys.stdout = captured_output
empl = Employee("Frank", "trainee")
empl.level = "junior"
sys.stdout = sys.__stdout__
output = captured_output.getvalue()
assert "'Frank' promoted to 'junior'." in output
assert f"Salary updated to \${Employee._base_salaries['junior']}." in output
`) })
class Employee:
_base_salaries = {
'trainee': 1000,
'junior': 2000,
'mid-level': 3000,
'senior': 4000,
}
def __init__(self, name, level):
if not (isinstance(name, str) and isinstance(level, str)):
raise TypeError("'name' and 'level' attribute must be of type 'str'.")
if level not in Employee._base_salaries:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid value '{level}' for 'level' attribute.")
self._name = name
self._level = level
self._salary = Employee._base_salaries[level]
def __str__(self):
return f'{self.name}: {self.level}'
def __repr__(self):
return f"Employee('{self.name}', '{self.level}')"
@property
def name(self):
return self._name
@name.setter
def name(self, new_name):
if not isinstance(new_name, str):
raise TypeError("'name' must be a string.")
self._name = new_name
print(f"'name' updated to '{self.name}'.")
@property
def level(self):
return self._level
@level.setter
def level(self, new_level):
if new_level not in Employee._base_salaries:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid value '{new_level}' for 'level' attribute.")
if new_level == self.level:
raise ValueError(f"'{self.level}' is already the selected level.")
if Employee._base_salaries[new_level] < Employee._base_salaries[self.level]:
raise ValueError(f"Cannot change to lower level.")
print(f"'{self.name}' promoted to '{new_level}'.")
--fcc-editable-region--
self._salary = Employee._base_salaries[new_level]
--fcc-editable-region--
self._level = new_level
@property
def salary(self):
return self._salary
@salary.setter
def salary(self, new_salary):
if not isinstance(new_salary, (int, float)):
raise TypeError("'salary' must be a number.")
if new_salary <= Employee._base_salaries[self.level]:
raise ValueError(f'Salary must be higher than minimum salary ${Employee._base_salaries[self.level]}.')
self._salary = new_salary
print(f'Salary updated to ${self.salary}.')
charlie_brown = Employee('Charlie Brown', 'trainee')
print(charlie_brown)
print(f'Base salary: ${charlie_brown.salary}')
charlie_brown.level = 'junior'
class Employee:
_base_salaries = {
'trainee': 1000,
'junior': 2000,
'mid-level': 3000,
'senior': 4000,
}
def __init__(self, name, level):
if not (isinstance(name, str) and isinstance(level, str)):
raise TypeError("'name' and 'level' attribute must be of type 'str'.")
if level not in Employee._base_salaries:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid value '{level}' for 'level' attribute.")
self._name = name
self._level = level
self._salary = Employee._base_salaries[level]
def __str__(self):
return f'{self.name}: {self.level}'
def __repr__(self):
return f"Employee('{self.name}', '{self.level}')"
@property
def name(self):
return self._name
@name.setter
def name(self, new_name):
if not isinstance(new_name, str):
raise TypeError("'name' must be a string.")
self._name = new_name
print(f"'name' updated to '{self.name}'.")
@property
def level(self):
return self._level
@level.setter
def level(self, new_level):
if new_level not in Employee._base_salaries:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid value '{new_level}' for 'level' attribute.")
if new_level == self.level:
raise ValueError(f"'{self.level}' is already the selected level.")
if Employee._base_salaries[new_level] < Employee._base_salaries[self.level]:
raise ValueError(f"Cannot change to lower level.")
print(f"'{self.name}' promoted to '{new_level}'.")
self.salary = Employee._base_salaries[new_level]
self._level = new_level
@property
def salary(self):
return self._salary
@salary.setter
def salary(self, new_salary):
if not isinstance(new_salary, (int, float)):
raise TypeError("'salary' must be a number.")
if new_salary <= Employee._base_salaries[self.level]:
raise ValueError(f'Salary must be higher than minimum salary ${Employee._base_salaries[self.level]}.')
self._salary = new_salary
print(f'Salary updated to ${self.salary}.')
charlie_brown = Employee('Charlie Brown', 'trainee')
print(charlie_brown)
print(f'Base salary: ${charlie_brown.salary}')
charlie_brown.level = 'junior'