--- id: 56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244aa title: Understanding Uninitialized Variables challengeType: 1 videoUrl: 'https://scrimba.com/c/cBa2JAL' forumTopicId: 18335 --- ## Description <section id='description'> When JavaScript variables are declared, they have an initial value of <code>undefined</code>. If you do a mathematical operation on an <code>undefined</code> variable your result will be <code>NaN</code> which means <dfn>"Not a Number"</dfn>. If you concatenate a string with an <code>undefined</code> variable, you will get a literal <dfn>string</dfn> of <code>"undefined"</code>. </section> ## Instructions <section id='instructions'> Initialize the three variables <code>a</code>, <code>b</code>, and <code>c</code> with <code>5</code>, <code>10</code>, and <code>"I am a"</code> respectively so that they will not be <code>undefined</code>. </section> ## Tests <section id='tests'> ```yml tests: - text: <code>a</code> should be defined and evaluated to have the value of <code>6</code>. testString: assert(typeof a === 'number' && a === 6); - text: <code>b</code> should be defined and evaluated to have the value of <code>15</code>. testString: assert(typeof b === 'number' && b === 15); - text: <code>c</code> should not contain <code>undefined</code> and should have a value of "I am a String!" testString: assert(!/undefined/.test(c) && c === "I am a String!"); - text: You should not change code below the specified comment. testString: assert(/a = a \+ 1;/.test(code) && /b = b \+ 5;/.test(code) && /c = c \+ " String!";/.test(code)); ``` </section> ## Challenge Seed <section id='challengeSeed'> <div id='js-seed'> ```js // Only change code below this line var a; var b; var c; // Only change code above this line a = a + 1; b = b + 5; c = c + " String!"; ``` </div> ### After Test <div id='js-teardown'> ```js (function(a,b,c){ return "a = " + a + ", b = " + b + ", c = '" + c + "'"; })(a,b,c); ``` </div> </section> ## Solution <section id='solution'> ```js var a = 5; var b = 10; var c = "I am a"; a = a + 1; b = b + 5; c = c + " String!"; ``` </section>