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
56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244ca Using Objects for Lookups 1 https://scrimba.com/c/cdBk8sM 18373 using-objects-for-lookups

--description--

Objects can be thought of as a key/value storage, like a dictionary. If you have tabular data, you can use an object to lookup values rather than a switch statement or an if/else chain. This is most useful when you know that your input data is limited to a certain range.

Here is an example of a simple reverse alphabet lookup:

const alpha = {
  1:"Z",
  2:"Y",
  3:"X",
  4:"W",
  ...
  24:"C",
  25:"B",
  26:"A"
};

alpha[2];
alpha[24];

const value = 2;
alpha[value];

alpha[2] is the string Y, alpha[24] is the string C, and alpha[value] is the string Y.

--instructions--

Convert the switch statement into an object called lookup. Use it to look up val and assign the associated string to the result variable.

--hints--

phoneticLookup("alpha") should equal the string Adams

assert(phoneticLookup('alpha') === 'Adams');

phoneticLookup("bravo") should equal the string Boston

assert(phoneticLookup('bravo') === 'Boston');

phoneticLookup("charlie") should equal the string Chicago

assert(phoneticLookup('charlie') === 'Chicago');

phoneticLookup("delta") should equal the string Denver

assert(phoneticLookup('delta') === 'Denver');

phoneticLookup("echo") should equal the string Easy

assert(phoneticLookup('echo') === 'Easy');

phoneticLookup("foxtrot") should equal the string Frank

assert(phoneticLookup('foxtrot') === 'Frank');

phoneticLookup("") should equal undefined

assert(typeof phoneticLookup('') === 'undefined');

You should not modify the return statement

assert(code.match(/return\sresult;/));

You should not use case, switch, or if statements

assert(
  !/case|switch|if/g.test(code.replace(/([/]{2}.*)|([/][*][^/*]*[*][/])/g, ''))
);

--seed--

--seed-contents--

// Setup
function phoneticLookup(val) {
  let result = "";

  // Only change code below this line
  switch(val) {
    case "alpha":
      result = "Adams";
      break;
    case "bravo":
      result = "Boston";
      break;
    case "charlie":
      result = "Chicago";
      break;
    case "delta":
      result = "Denver";
      break;
    case "echo":
      result = "Easy";
      break;
    case "foxtrot":
      result = "Frank";
  }

  // Only change code above this line
  return result;
}

phoneticLookup("charlie");

--solutions--

function phoneticLookup(val) {
  let result = "";

  const lookup = {
    alpha: "Adams",
    bravo: "Boston",
    charlie: "Chicago",
    delta: "Denver",
    echo: "Easy",
    foxtrot: "Frank"
  };

  result = lookup[val];

  return result;
}