Asked by dave
Write a program that lets you know if you can have a key or not, based on your role at the school. Your program must use the logical or operator.
First ask for the user’s role at the school. They can be a student, administrator, or a teacher. (And remember that capitalization is important! ‘Student’ is not the same as ‘student’.)
Example 1: Administrator or Teacher
For example, if this was the input:
Are you an administrator, teacher, or student?: teacher
This should be the output:
Administrators and teachers get keys!
Example 2: Student
And if this was the input:
Are you an administrator, teacher, or student?: student
This should be the output:
Students do not get keys!
(Note: You should also be able to handle a situation where the user enters a value other than administrator, teacher or student and tell them they must be one of the three choices!)
Example 3: Other
If they input anything else:
Are you an administrator, teacher, or student?: secretary
This should be the output:
You can only be an administrator, teacher, or student!
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Here's a simple Python program that uses the logical or operator and matches the required prompts and outputs:
```python
role = input("Are you an administrator, teacher, or student?: ").strip()
if role == "administrator" or role == "teacher":
print("Administrators and teachers get keys!")
elif role == "student":
print("Students do not get keys!")
else:
print("You can only be an administrator, teacher, or student!")
```
Notes:
- Capitalization matters (e.g., "Teacher" won't match "teacher").
- .strip() is used only to remove accidental leading/trailing spaces.
```python
role = input("Are you an administrator, teacher, or student?: ").strip()
if role == "administrator" or role == "teacher":
print("Administrators and teachers get keys!")
elif role == "student":
print("Students do not get keys!")
else:
print("You can only be an administrator, teacher, or student!")
```
Notes:
- Capitalization matters (e.g., "Teacher" won't match "teacher").
- .strip() is used only to remove accidental leading/trailing spaces.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.