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Start your free trialCaitlin Charniga
559 PointsI'm adding the "#" character in between but it's still not working.
see title
var id = "23188xtr";
var lastName = "Smith";
var userName ='id'.toUpperCase();
var userName =+ "#";
var userName ='lastName'.toUpperCase();
<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
<title>JavaScript Basics</title>
</head>
<body>
<script src="app.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
3 Answers
Jacob Mishkin
23,118 Pointsthese are all good answers! for me personally I would want to use one variable instead of have to write it the variable three times. so the code can also look like this:
var id = "23188xtr";
var lastName = "Smith";
var userName = id.toUpperCase(); + "#" + lastName.toUpperCase();
So you can concatenate everything into just one variable, and make it look clean. the other approach works just as well! I just wanted to show another style of performing the same task.
Hugo Paz
15,622 PointsHi Caitlin,
You are not using the variable names when using the toUpper method. You are using strings.
So this:
var userName ='id'.toUpperCase();
Sets userName to 'ID'.
You want it to be "23188XTR".
So you should do:
var userName =id.toUpperCase();
Same with lastName.
Jason Anders
Treehouse Moderator 145,860 PointsHugo's correct, but you also need to flip the =+ to +=
Hugo Paz
15,622 PointsGood catch.