freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/use-bracket-notation-to-find-the-first-character-in-a-string.md
Oliver Eyton-Williams ee1e8abd87
feat(curriculum): restore seed + solution to Chinese (#40683)
* feat(tools): add seed/solution restore script

* chore(curriculum): remove empty sections' markers

* chore(curriculum): add seed + solution to Chinese

* chore: remove old formatter

* fix: update getChallenges

parse translated challenges separately, without reference to the source

* chore(curriculum): add dashedName to English

* chore(curriculum): add dashedName to Chinese

* refactor: remove unused challenge property 'name'

* fix: relax dashedName requirement

* fix: stray tag

Remove stray `pre` tag from challenge file.

Signed-off-by: nhcarrigan <nhcarrigan@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: nhcarrigan <nhcarrigan@gmail.com>
2021-01-12 19:31:00 -07:00

73 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown

---
id: bd7123c9c549eddfaeb5bdef
title: Use Bracket Notation to Find the First Character in a String
challengeType: 1
videoUrl: 'https://scrimba.com/c/ca8JwhW'
forumTopicId: 18341
dashedName: use-bracket-notation-to-find-the-first-character-in-a-string
---
# --description--
<dfn>Bracket notation</dfn> is a way to get a character at a specific `index` within a string.
Most modern programming languages, like JavaScript, don't start counting at 1 like humans do. They start at 0. This is referred to as <dfn>Zero-based</dfn> indexing.
For example, the character at index 0 in the word "Charles" is "C". So if `var firstName = "Charles"`, you can get the value of the first letter of the string by using `firstName[0]`.
Example:
```js
var firstName = "Charles";
var firstLetter = firstName[0]; // firstLetter is "C"
```
# --instructions--
Use bracket notation to find the first character in the `lastName` variable and assign it to `firstLetterOfLastName`.
**Hint:** Try looking at the example above if you get stuck.
# --hints--
The `firstLetterOfLastName` variable should have the value of `L`.
```js
assert(firstLetterOfLastName === 'L');
```
You should use bracket notation.
```js
assert(code.match(/firstLetterOfLastName\s*?=\s*?lastName\[.*?\]/));
```
# --seed--
## --after-user-code--
```js
(function(v){return v;})(firstLetterOfLastName);
```
## --seed-contents--
```js
// Setup
var firstLetterOfLastName = "";
var lastName = "Lovelace";
// Only change code below this line
firstLetterOfLastName = lastName; // Change this line
```
# --solutions--
```js
var firstLetterOfLastName = "";
var lastName = "Lovelace";
// Only change code below this line
firstLetterOfLastName = lastName[0];
```