Files
Kristofer Koishigawa bcc9beff1f feat(curriculum): introduce let and const earlier (#43133)
* fix: move "Explore Differences Between..." to basic JS, update seed and tests

* fix: resequence "Declare String Variables"

* fix: move "Declare a Read-Only Variable..." to basic JS, update seed and tests

* fix: revert changes to non-English "Explore Differences Between..." test text

* fix: revert test strings, solutions, and seeds for non-English challenges

* fix: update "Declare String Variables" description

* fix: sync quotation marks in description and seed

* fix: modify note in "Declare a Read-Only..." challenge

* fix: update operator and compound assignment challenges

* fix: update string challenges

* fix: update array and array method challenges

* fix: update function and scope challenges, resequence slightly

* fix: "Word Blanks" solution

* fix: add spacing to seed

* fix: concatenating += challenge spacing

* fix: appending variables to strings spacing

* fix: find the length of a string spacing

* fix: removed instances of removedFromMyArray = 0

* fix: switch challenges

* fix: function argument and param spacing

* fix: update counting cards, object challenges, and record collection

* fix: finish rest of Basic JS section

* fix: introducing else statements solution

* fix: update spacing and wording

* fix: update wording for const challenge

* fix: update functional programming challenges

* fix: intermediate algorithms and cert challenges

* fix: revert some spacing and remove comments for fp challenge solutions

* feat: add notes with links to moved let and const challenges in first two es6 challenges

* fix: update es6 intro text

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/concatenating-strings-with-the-plus-equals-operator.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/finding-a-remainder-in-javascript.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/global-scope-and-functions.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/iterate-through-an-array-with-a-for-loop.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/iterate-through-an-array-with-a-for-loop.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/functional-programming/implement-map-on-a-prototype.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/declare-a-read-only-variable-with-the-const-keyword.md

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>

* fix: concatenating strings with plus operator seed

* fix: add comments back to Declare a Read-Only Variable... seed

* feat: add es6 to basic javascript redirect tests for let and const challenges

* fix: revert "Concatenating Strings with Plus Operator" seed

* fix: move test file to cypress/integration/learn/redirects, separate redirect tests

Co-authored-by: Shaun Hamilton <shauhami020@gmail.com>
2021-10-25 17:55:58 +01:00

2.8 KiB

id, title, challengeType, videoUrl, forumTopicId, dashedName
id title challengeType videoUrl forumTopicId dashedName
56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244b6 Escape Sequences in Strings 1 https://scrimba.com/c/cvmqRh6 17567 escape-sequences-in-strings

--description--

Quotes are not the only characters that can be escaped inside a string. There are two reasons to use escaping characters:

  1. To allow you to use characters you may not otherwise be able to type out, such as a carriage return.
  2. To allow you to represent multiple quotes in a string without JavaScript misinterpreting what you mean.

We learned this in the previous challenge.

CodeOutput
\'single quote
\"double quote
\\backslash
\nnewline
\rcarriage return
\ttab
\bword boundary
\fform feed

Note that the backslash itself must be escaped in order to display as a backslash.

--instructions--

Assign the following three lines of text into the single variable myStr using escape sequences.

FirstLine
    \SecondLine
ThirdLine

You will need to use escape sequences to insert special characters correctly. You will also need to follow the spacing as it looks above, with no spaces between escape sequences or words.

Note: The indentation for SecondLine is achieved with the tab escape character, not spaces.

--hints--

myStr should not contain any spaces

assert(!/ /.test(myStr));

myStr should contain the strings FirstLine, SecondLine and ThirdLine (remember case sensitivity)

assert(
  /FirstLine/.test(myStr) && /SecondLine/.test(myStr) && /ThirdLine/.test(myStr)
);

FirstLine should be followed by the newline character \n

assert(/FirstLine\n/.test(myStr));

myStr should contain a tab character \t which follows a newline character

assert(/\n\t/.test(myStr));

SecondLine should be preceded by the backslash character \

assert(/\\SecondLine/.test(myStr));

There should be a newline character between SecondLine and ThirdLine

assert(/SecondLine\nThirdLine/.test(myStr));

myStr should only contain characters shown in the instructions

assert(myStr === 'FirstLine\n\t\\SecondLine\nThirdLine');

--seed--

--after-user-code--

(function(){
if (myStr !== undefined){
console.log('myStr:\n' + myStr);}})();

--seed-contents--

const myStr = ""; // Change this line

--solutions--

const myStr = "FirstLine\n\t\\SecondLine\nThirdLine";