freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/store-multiple-values-in-one-variable-using-javascript-arrays.english.md
Oliver Eyton-Williams bd68b70f3d
Feat: hide blocks not challenges (#39504)
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Co-authored-by: Ahmad Abdolsaheb <ahmad.abdolsaheb@gmail.com>

* feat: hide blocks not challenges

Co-authored-by: Ahmad Abdolsaheb <ahmad.abdolsaheb@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: Ahmad Abdolsaheb <ahmad.abdolsaheb@gmail.com>
2020-09-03 15:07:40 -07:00

1.7 KiB

id, title, challengeType, videoUrl, forumTopicId
id title challengeType videoUrl forumTopicId
bd7993c9c69feddfaeb8bdef Store Multiple Values in one Variable using JavaScript Arrays 1 https://scrimba.com/c/crZQWAm 18309

Description

With JavaScript array variables, we can store several pieces of data in one place. You start an array declaration with an opening square bracket, end it with a closing square bracket, and put a comma between each entry, like this: var sandwich = ["peanut butter", "jelly", "bread"].

Instructions

Modify the new array myArray so that it contains both a string and a number (in that order). Hint
Refer to the example code in the text editor if you get stuck.

Tests

tests:
  - text: <code>myArray</code> should be an <code>array</code>.
    testString: assert(typeof myArray == 'object');
  - text: The first item in <code>myArray</code> should be a <code>string</code>.
    testString: assert(typeof myArray[0] !== 'undefined' && typeof myArray[0] == 'string');
  - text: The second item in <code>myArray</code> should be a <code>number</code>.
    testString: assert(typeof myArray[1] !== 'undefined' && typeof myArray[1] == 'number');

Challenge Seed

// Only change code below this line
var myArray = [];

After Test

(function(z){return z;})(myArray);

Solution

var myArray = ["The Answer", 42];