Ishu Singhal 56469d1c5c
fix(learn): update tests to allow more valid solutions (#39054)
* fix(curriculum): updated tests: fixed #39049

It won't pass something like this now:

const myConcat = () => {};
console.log(3);

* fix: add suggested change

Co-authored-by: moT01 <20648924+moT01@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-09-03 15:28:35 +01:00

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---
id: 587d7b88367417b2b2512b44
title: Write Arrow Functions with Parameters
challengeType: 1
isHidden: false
forumTopicId: 301223
---
## Description
<section id='description'>
Just like a regular function, you can pass arguments into an arrow function.
```js
// doubles input value and returns it
const doubler = (item) => item * 2;
```
If an arrow function has a single argument, the parentheses enclosing the argument may be omitted.
```js
// the same function, without the argument parentheses
const doubler = item => item * 2;
```
It is possible to pass more than one argument into an arrow function.
```js
// multiplies the first input value by the second and returns it
const multiplier = (item, multi) => item * multi;
```
</section>
## Instructions
<section id='instructions'>
Rewrite the <code>myConcat</code> function which appends contents of <code>arr2</code> to <code>arr1</code> so that the function uses arrow function syntax.
</section>
## Tests
<section id='tests'>
```yml
tests:
- text: You should replace the <code>var</code> keyword.
testString: getUserInput => assert(!getUserInput('index').match(/var/g));
- text: <code>myConcat</code> should be a constant variable (by using <code>const</code>).
testString: getUserInput => assert(getUserInput('index').match(/const\s+myConcat/g));
- text: <code>myConcat</code> should be an arrow function with two parameters
testString: assert(/myConcat=\(\w+,\w+\)=>/.test(code.replace(/\s/g, '')) && typeof myConcat === 'function');
- text: <code>myConcat()</code> should return <code>[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]</code>.
testString: assert.deepEqual(myConcat([1, 2], [3, 4, 5]), [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
- text: <code>function</code> keyword should not be used.
testString: getUserInput => assert(!getUserInput('index').match(/function/g));
```
</section>
## Challenge Seed
<section id='challengeSeed'>
<div id='js-seed'>
```js
var myConcat = function(arr1, arr2) {
"use strict";
return arr1.concat(arr2);
};
console.log(myConcat([1, 2], [3, 4, 5]));
```
</div>
</section>
## Solution
<section id='solution'>
```js
const myConcat = (arr1, arr2) => {
"use strict";
return arr1.concat(arr2);
};
console.log(myConcat([1, 2], [3, 4, 5]));
```
</section>