--description--
A new feature of ES6 is the template literal. This is a special type of string that makes creating complex strings easier.
Template literals allow you to create multi-line strings and to use string interpolation features to create strings.
Consider the code below:
const person = {
name: "Zodiac Hasbro",
age: 56
};
const greeting = `Hello, my name is ${person.name}!
I am ${person.age} years old.`;
console.log(greeting);
The console will display the strings Hello, my name is Zodiac Hasbro!
and I am 56 years old.
.
A lot of things happened there. Firstly, the example uses backticks (`
), not quotes ('
or "
), to wrap the string. Secondly, notice that the string is multi-line, both in the code and the output. This saves inserting \n
within strings. The ${variable}
syntax used above is a placeholder. Basically, you won't have to use concatenation with the +
operator anymore. To add variables to strings, you just drop the variable in a template string and wrap it with ${
and }
. Similarly, you can include other expressions in your string literal, for example ${a + b}
. This new way of creating strings gives you more flexibility to create robust strings.
--instructions--
Use template literal syntax with backticks to create an array of list element (li
) strings. Each list element's text should be one of the array elements from the failure
property on the result
object and have a class
attribute with the value text-warning
. The makeList
function should return the array of list item strings.
Use an iterator method (any kind of loop) to get the desired output (shown below).
[
'<li class="text-warning">no-var</li>',
'<li class="text-warning">var-on-top</li>',
'<li class="text-warning">linebreak</li>'
]
--hints--
failuresList
should be an array containing result failure
messages.
assert(
typeof makeList(result.failure) === 'object' && failuresList.length === 3
);
failuresList
should be equal to the specified output.
assert(
makeList(result.failure).every(
(v, i) =>
v === `<li class="text-warning">${result.failure[i]}</li>` ||
v === `<li class='text-warning'>${result.failure[i]}</li>`
)
);
Template strings and expression interpolation should be used.
assert.match(code, /(`.*\${.*}.*`)/);
An iterator should be used.
assert(__helpers.removeJSComments(code).match(/for|map|reduce|forEach|while/));
--seed--
--seed-contents--
const result = {
success: ["max-length", "no-amd", "prefer-arrow-functions"],
failure: ["no-var", "var-on-top", "linebreak"],
skipped: ["no-extra-semi", "no-dup-keys"]
};
function makeList(arr) {
// Only change code below this line
const failureItems = [];
// Only change code above this line
return failureItems;
}
const failuresList = makeList(result.failure);
--solutions--
const result = {
success: ["max-length", "no-amd", "prefer-arrow-functions"],
failure: ["no-var", "var-on-top", "linebreak"],
skipped: ["no-extra-semi", "no-dup-keys"]
};
function makeList(arr) {
return arr.map(val => `<li class="text-warning">${val}</li>`);
}
const failuresList = makeList(result.failure);