2020-09-29 22:09:04 +02:00

2.0 KiB

id, title, challengeType, videoUrl, forumTopicId
id title challengeType videoUrl forumTopicId
56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244b8 Concatenating Strings with the Plus Equals Operator 1 https://scrimba.com/c/cbQmmC4 16803

Description

We can also use the += operator to concatenate a string onto the end of an existing string variable. This can be very helpful to break a long string over several lines. Note
Watch out for spaces. Concatenation does not add spaces between concatenated strings, so you'll need to add them yourself.

Example:

var ourStr = "I come first. ";
ourStr += "I come second.";
// ourStr is now "I come first. I come second."

Instructions

Build myStr over several lines by concatenating these two strings: "This is the first sentence. " and "This is the second sentence." using the += operator. Use the += operator similar to how it is shown in the editor. Start by assigning the first string to myStr, then add on the second string.

Tests

tests:
  - text: <code>myStr</code> should have a value of <code>This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence.</code>
    testString: assert(myStr === "This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence.");
  - text: You should use the <code>+=</code> operator to build <code>myStr</code>.
    testString: assert(code.match(/myStr\s*\+=\s*(["']).*\1/g));

Challenge Seed


// Only change code below this line

var myStr;


After Test

(function(){
  if(typeof myStr === 'string') {
    return 'myStr = "' + myStr + '"';
  } else {
    return 'myStr is not a string';
  }
})();

Solution

var myStr = "This is the first sentence. ";
myStr += "This is the second sentence.";