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Start your free trialMathew Yangang
4,433 Pointsusing upper cases
This question is a little bit confusing, do i have to write a whole new line or add the # symbol and last Name, if so where do i make the changes?
var id = "23188xtr";
var lastName = "Smith";
var userName = id.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>
4 Answers
Matthew Long
28,407 PointsYou should add onto userName
using string concatenation so that the final value would read 23188XTR#SMITH
. This is all done on the same line you declared the userName
variable. Does that clear things up any?
Mathew Yangang
4,433 PointsSo I just add #SMITH next to id on the variable username?
Matthew Long
28,407 PointsYou're going to add the string "#"
and then add the uppercase lastName
variable using .toUpperCase()
like you did with the id
variable. I can give you the answer.
Mathew Yangang
4,433 PointsSo we need to upper case declarations on the same line of code?
Matthew Long
28,407 PointsSure. It's probably best to place it on the same line though you don't technically have to:
var id = "23188xtr";
var lastName = "Smith";
var userName = id.toUpperCase();
userName += "#";
userName += lastName.toUpperCase();
Is equal to:
var id = "23188xtr";
var lastName = "Smith";
var userName = id.toUpperCase() + "#" + lastName.toUpperCase();
As you can see it's much easier to read it when it's on one line. It's also much faster to write!
Mathew Yangang
4,433 PointsThanks Matthew!