OK, that probably sounds weird, so let me explain. Wrong code is good. It helps us understand the mistake or misunderstanding OP is making. But sometimes, I can't figure out how OP thought the code would work in the first place. Sometimes I get the sense that they are just throwing random code together and hoping it "just magically works," but maybe (being charitable) their mind works differently from mine. Maybe they have some really weird understanding of programming in general or this language in particular and I'm just not smart enough to figure out what that understanding is.
In this question, OP's code is wrong, but that's fine. What's not fine is that I can't figure out what mistake or combination of mistakes would lead OP to believe their code would work in the first place (to be clear, I view this as a failing on my part rather than OP's). The only way to answer these questions is to provide code that does what OP wants, which turns us back into the code writing service that we supposedly aren't. I want to help questioners understand their questions, not just write their code for them. Usually the answers are mostly just "Here's some code that does what you want" (kudos to the accepted answer for breaking down the correct code point-by-point, but you don't see that a lot in my experience, and I still can't figure out how this OP thought their wrong code would work).
What should I do with these questions? I don't want to downvote them; they are typically rather well-written ("I'm trying to do X, but I get Y, here's my code, how do I make it do X instead?" -- hits all the essential points). I just can't figure out where the OP is coming from.