Arbeide med Strenger og Tall
Sveip for å vise menyen
Strings in JavaScript are sequences of characters that you can combine, manipulate, and analyze. You can join strings together using the plus (+) operator, which is called concatenation.
Template literals, enclosed by backticks (`), allow you to insert variables directly into a string using ${}. String methods like length and toUpperCase help you measure and manipulate string values.
1234567891011121314151617// String concatenation let firstName = "Ada"; let lastName = "Lovelace"; let fullName = firstName + " " + lastName; // "Ada Lovelace" console.log(fullName); // Template literals let age = 30; let greeting = `Hello, my name is ${fullName} and I am ${age} years old.`; console.log(greeting); // Common string methods let shout = fullName.toUpperCase(); // "ADA LOVELACE" console.log(shout); let nameLength = fullName.length; // 12 console.log(nameLength);
Numbers in JavaScript are used for calculations and mathematical operations.
You can perform arithmetic using operators such as +, -, *, and /. The increment (++) and decrement (--) operators add or subtract one from a variable. Sometimes, you need to convert a string to a number for calculations.
JavaScript provides functions like parseInt for whole numbers and parseFloat for decimal numbers to help you convert string values into numbers.
12345678910111213// Parsing and converting strings to numbers let input = "42"; let parsedInt = parseInt(input); // 42 (number) console.log(parsedInt); let price = "19.99"; let parsedFloat = parseFloat(price); // 19.99 (number) console.log(parsedFloat); // Converting numbers back to strings let num = 100; let numAsString = num.toString(); // "100" console.log(numAsString);
Takk for tilbakemeldingene dine!
Spør AI
Spør AI
Spør om hva du vil, eller prøv ett av de foreslåtte spørsmålene for å starte chatten vår