* fix(curriculum): tests quotes * fix(curriculum): fill seed-teardown * fix(curriculum): fix tests and remove unneeded seed-teardown
		
			
				
	
	
	
		
			3.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			3.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
id, title, challengeType
| id | title | challengeType | 
|---|---|---|
| 587d7b7c367417b2b2512b18 | Add Key-Value Pairs to JavaScript Objects | 1 | 
Description
let FCC_User = {The above code defines an object called
username: 'awesome_coder',
followers: 572,
points: 1741,
completedProjects: 15
};
FCC_User that has four properties, each of which map to a specific value. If we wanted to know the number of followers FCC_User has, we can access that property by writing:
let userData = FCC_User.followers;This is called dot notation. Alternatively, we can also access the property with brackets, like so:
// userData equals 572
let userData = FCC_User['followers']Notice that with bracket notation, we enclosed
// userData equals 572
followers in quotes. This is because the brackets actually allow us to pass a variable in to be evaluated as a property name (hint: keep this in mind for later!). Had we passed followers in without the quotes, the JavaScript engine would have attempted to evaluate it as a variable, and a ReferenceError: followers is not defined would have been thrown.
Instructions
foods object with three entries. Add three more entries: bananas with a value of 13, grapes with a value of 35, and strawberries with a value of 27.
Tests
tests:
  - text: <code>foods</code> is an object
    testString: assert(typeof foods === 'object', '<code>foods</code> is an object');
  - text: The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"bananas"</code> with a value of <code>13</code>
    testString: assert(foods.bananas === 13, 'The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"bananas"</code> with a value of <code>13</code>');
  - text: The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"grapes"</code> with a value of <code>35</code>
    testString: assert(foods.grapes === 35, 'The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"grapes"</code> with a value of <code>35</code>');
  - text: The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"strawberries"</code> with a value of <code>27</code>
    testString: assert(foods.strawberries === 27, 'The <code>foods</code> object has a key <code>"strawberries"</code> with a value of <code>27</code>');
  - text: The key-value pairs should be set using dot or bracket notation
    testString: assert(code.search(/bananas:/) === -1 && code.search(/grapes:/) === -1 && code.search(/strawberries:/) === -1, 'The key-value pairs should be set using dot or bracket notation');
Challenge Seed
let foods = {
  apples: 25,
  oranges: 32,
  plums: 28
};
// change code below this line
// change code above this line
console.log(foods);
Solution
// solution required