import
allows you to choose which parts of a file or module to load. In the previous lesson, the examples exported add
from the math_functions.js
file. Here's how you can import it to use in another file:
```js
import { add } from './math_functions.js';
```
Here, import
will find add
in math_functions.js
, import just that function for you to use, and ignore the rest. The ./
tells the import to look for the math_functions.js
file in the same folder as the current file. The relative file path (./
) and file extension (.js
) are required when using import in this way.
You can import more than one item from the file by adding them in the import
statement like this:
```js
import { add, subtract } from './math_functions.js';
```
import
statement that will allow the current file to use the uppercaseString
and lowercaseString
functions you exported in the previous lesson. These functions are in a file called string_functions.js
, which is in the same directory as the current file.
uppercaseString
.
testString: assert(code.match(/import\s*{\s*(uppercaseString[^}]*|[^,]*,\s*uppercaseString\s*)}\s+from\s+('|")\.\/string_functions\.js\2/g));
- text: You should properly import lowercaseString
.
testString: assert(code.match(/import\s*{\s*(lowercaseString[^}]*|[^,]*,\s*lowercaseString\s*)}\s+from\s+('|")\.\/string_functions\.js\2/g));
```