-
<>
-
~
-
==!
-
!==
Reference Javascript Comparison Operators
- Only a for statement uses a callback function.
- A for statement is generic, but a forEach statement can be used only with an array.
- Only a forEach statement lets you specify your own iterator.
- A forEach statement is generic, but a for statement can be used only with an array.
Reference Differences between forEach and for loop
function addTax(total) {
return total * 1.05;
}
-
addTax = 50;
-
return addTax 50;
-
addTax(50);
-
addTax 50;
Reference functions in javascript
Q4. Which statement is the correct way to create a variable called rate and assign it the value 100?
-
let rate = 100;
-
let 100 = rate;
-
100 = let rate;
-
rate = 100;
Reference Javascript Assignment operators
Q5. Which statement creates a new object using the Person constructor? Which statement creates a new Person object called "student"?
-
var student = new Person();
-
var student = construct Person;
-
var student = Person();
-
var student = construct Person();
Q6. When would the final statement in the code shown be logged to the console? When would 'results shown' be logged to the console?
let modal = document.querySelector('#result');
setTimeout(function () {
modal.classList.remove('hidden');
}, 10000);
console.log('Results shown');
- after 10 second
- after results are received from the HTTP request
- after 10000 seconds
- immediately
Reference Javascript is synchronous and single threaded
class Animal {
static belly = [];
eat() {
Animal.belly.push('food');
}
}
let a = new Animal();
a.eat();
console.log(/* Snippet Here */); //Prints food
-
a.prototype.belly[0]
-
Object.getPrototype0f (a).belly[0]
-
Animal.belly[0]
-
a.belly[0]
Reference Javascript Class static Keyword
Q8. You've written the code shown to log a set of consecutive values, but it instead results in the value 5, 5, 5, and 5 being logged to the console. Which revised version of the code would result in the value 1, 2, 3 and 4 being logged?
for (var i = 1; i <= 4; i++) {
setTimeout(function () {
console.log(i);
}, i * 10000);
}
- .
for (var i = 1; i <= 4; i++) {
(function (i) {
setTimeout(function () {
console.log(j);
}, j * 1000);
})(j);
}
- .
for (var i = 1; i <= 4; i++) {
setTimeout(function () {
console.log(i);
}, i * 1000);
}
- .
for (var i = 1; i <= 4; i++) {
(function (j) {
setTimeout(function () {
console.log(j);
}, j * 1000);
})(i);
}
- .
for (var j = 1; j <= 4; j++) {
setTimeout(function () {
console.log(j);
}, j * 1000);
}
- It reloads the document whenever the value changes.
- It returns a reference to a variable in its parent scope.
- It completes execution without returning.
- It copies a local variable to the global scope.
- .
let discountPrice = function (price) {
return price * 0.85;
};
- .
let discountPrice(price) {
return price * 0.85;
};
- .
let function = discountPrice(price) {
return price * 0.85;
};
- .
discountPrice = function (price) {
return price * 0.85;
};
Reference defining javascript functions
var Storm = function () {};
Storm.prototype.precip = 'rain';
var WinterStorm = function () {};
WinterStorm.prototype = new Storm();
WinterStorm.prototype.precip = 'snow';
var bob = new WinterStorm();
console.log(bob.precip);
- Storm()
- undefined
- 'rain'
- 'snow'
Q12. You need to match a time value such as 12:00:32. Which of the following regular expressions would work for your code?
-
/[0-9]{2,}:[0-9]{2,}:[0-9]{2,}/
-
/\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/
-
/[0-9]+:[0-9]+:[0-9]+/
-
/ : : /
NOTE: The first three are all partially correct and will match digits, but the second option is the most correct because it will only match 2 digit time values (12:00:32). The first option would have worked if the repetitions range looked like [0-9]{2}
, however because of the comma [0-9]{2,}
it will select 2 or more digits (120:000:321). The third option will any range of time digits, single and multiple (meaning 1:2:3
will also match).
More resources:
'use strict';
function logThis() {
this.desc = 'logger';
console.log(this);
}
new logThis();
-
undefined
-
window
-
{desc: "logger"}
-
function
let roadTypes = ['street', 'road', 'avenue', 'circle'];
- roadTypes.2
- roadTypes[3]
- roadTypes.3
- roadTypes[2]
Reference accessing javascript arrays
console.log(typeof 42);
-
'float'
-
'value'
-
'number'
-
'integer'
Reference javascript data types
-
self
-
object
-
target
-
source
Q17. You're adding error handling to the code shown. Which code would you include within the if statement to specify an error message?
function addNumbers(x, y) {
if (isNaN(x) || isNaN(y)) {
}
}
-
exception('One or both parameters are not numbers')
-
catch('One or both parameters are not numbers')
-
error('One or both parameters are not numbers')
-
throw('One or both parameters are not numbers')
-
JSON.fromString();
-
JSON.parse()
-
JSON.toObject()
-
JSON.stringify()
Reference convert json to javascript object
- When you want to reuse a set of statements multiple times.
- When you want your code to choose between multiple options.
- When you want to group data together.
- When you want to loop through a group of statement.
Reference javascript conditionals
for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
console.log(i);
}
- 1 2 3 4 5
- 1 2 3 4
- 0 1 2 3 4
- 0 1 2 3 4 5
Reference javascript for loops
Q21. Which Object method returns an iterable that can be used to iterate over the properties of an object?
-
Object.get()
-
Object.loop()
-
Object.each()
-
Object.keys()
Reference javascript object static methods
var a = ['dog', 'cat', 'hen'];
a[100] = 'fox';
console.log(a.length);
- 101
- 3
- 4
- 100
Q23. What is one difference between collections created with Map and collections created with Object?
- You can iterate over values in a Map in their insertion order.
- You can count the records in a Map with a single method call.
- Keys in Maps can be strings.
- You can access values in a Map without iterating over the whole collection.
Explanation: Map.prototype.size returns the number of elements in a Map, whereas Object does not have a built-in method to return its size.
Reference map methods javascript
const dessert = { type: 'pie' };
dessert.type = 'pudding';
- pie
- The code will throw an error.
- pudding
- undefined
Reference working with js objects
- ReferenceError
- true
- 0
- false
-
++
-
--
-
==
-
||
Reference short circuit javascript
Q27. Which statement sets the Person constructor as the parent of the Student constructor in the prototype chain?
-
Student.parent = Person;
-
Student.prototype = new Person();
-
Student.prototype = Person;
-
Student.prototype = Person();
- to tell parsers to interpret your JavaScript syntax loosely
- to tell parsers to enforce all JavaScript syntax rules when processing your code
- to instruct the browser to automatically fix any errors it finds in the code
- to enable ES6 features in your code
Reference what is use strict in js
Q29. Which Variable-defining keyword allows its variable to be accessed (as undefined) before the line that defines it?
- all of them
-
const
-
var
-
let
Reference var vs let vs const in js
-
Boolean(0)
-
Boolean("")
-
Boolean(NaN)
-
Boolean("false")
-
this
-
catch
-
function
-
array
- Arguments
- args
- argsArray
- argumentsList
Reference implicit js parameters for functions
class X {
get Y() {
return 42;
}
}
var x = new X();
-
x.get('Y')
-
x.Y
-
x.Y()
-
x.get().Y
sum(10, 20);
diff(10, 20);
function sum(x, y) {
return x + y;
}
let diff = function (x, y) {
return x - y;
};
- 30, ReferenceError, 30, -10
- 30, ReferenceError
- 30, -10
- ReferenceError, -10
Reference accessing before initialization
Q35. Why is it usually better to work with Objects instead of Arrays to store a collection of records?
- Objects are more efficient in terms of storage.
- Adding a record to an object is significantly faster than pushing a record into an array.
- Most operations involve looking up a record, and objects can do that better than arrays.
- Working with objects makes the code more readable.
Reference efficiency of lookups Explanation: Records in an object can be retrieved using their key which can be any given value (e.g. an employee ID, a city name, etc), whereas to retrieve a record from an array we need to know its index.
- It can be used for both internal and external JavaScript code.
- It can be used only for internal JavaScript code.
- It can be used only for internal or external JavaScript code that exports a promise.
- It can be used only for external JavaScript code.
Reference async attribute for html
-
import _ from 'lodash';
-
import 'lodash' as _;
-
import '_' from 'lodash;
-
import lodash as _ from 'lodash';
Reference how to import library in js
[] == [];
- true
- undefined
- []
- false
Reference arrays in js are objects
- Generator function
- Arrow function
- Async/ Await function
- Promise function
Reference what are generators in nodejs
var v = 1;
var f1 = function () {
console.log(v);
};
var f2 = function () {
var v = 2;
f1();
};
f2();
- 2
- 1
- Nothing - this code will throw an error.
- undefined
Reference closures in js / nested functions
- Every object in the program has to be a function.
- Code is grouped with the state it modifies.
- Date fields and methods are kept in units.
- Side effects are not allowed.
Reference functional programming
Q42. Your code is producing the error: TypeError: Cannot read property 'reduce' of undefined. What does that mean?
- You are calling a method named reduce on an object that's declared but has no value.
- You are calling a method named reduce on an object that does not exist.
- You are calling a method named reduce on an empty array.
- You are calling a method named reduce on an object that's has a null value.
Explanation: You cannot invoke reduce on undefined object... It will throw (yourObject is not Defined...)
let arr = [];
- 3
- 2
- 0
- 1
-
typeof
-
delete
-
instanceof
-
void
var start = 1;
if (start === 1) {
let end = 2;
}
- conditional
- block
- global
- function
Reference block vs function scope
const x = 6 % 2;
const y = x ? 'One' : 'Two';
- One
- undefined
- TRUE
- Two
-
throw
-
exception
-
catch
-
error
Reference throwing errors in js
- The defer attribute can work synchronously.
- The defer attribute works only with generators.
- The defer attribute works only with promises.
- The defer attribute will asynchronously load the scripts in order.
var a;
var b = (a = 3) ? true : false;
- The condition in the ternary is using the assignment operator.
- You can't define a variable without initializing it.
- You can't use a ternary in the right-hand side of an assignment operator.
- The code is using the deprecated var keyword.
<p class="pull">lorem ipsum</p>
-
Document.querySelector('class.pull')
-
document.querySelector('.pull');
-
Document.querySelector('pull')
-
Document.querySelector('#pull')
let answer = true;
if (answer === false) {
return 0;
} else {
return 10;
}
- 10
- true
- false
- 0
Reference javascript conditionals
var start = 1;
function setEnd() {
var end = 10;
}
setEnd();
console.log(end);
- 10
- 0
- ReferenceError
- undefined
function sayHello() {
console.log('hello');
}
console.log(sayHello.prototype);
- undefined
- "hello"
- an object with a constructor property
- an error message
- Object
- Set
- Array
- Map
function printA() {
console.log(answer);
var answer = 1;
}
printA();
printA();
-
1
then1
-
1
thenundefined
-
undefined
thenundefined
-
undefined
then1
- forEach allows you to specify your own iterator, whereas for does not.
- forEach can be used only with strings, whereas for can be used with additional data types.
- forEach can be used only with an array, whereas for can be used with additional data types.
- for loops can be nested; whereas forEach loops cannot.
Reference Differences between forEach and for loop
- =>
({})
- =>
{}
- =>
{ return {};}
- =>
(({}))
- to start tasks that might take some time without blocking subsequent tasks from executing immediately
- to ensure that tasks further down in your code are not initiated until earlier tasks have completed
- to make your code faster
- to ensure that the call stack maintains a LIFO (Last in, First Out) structure
EXPLANATION: "to ensure that tasks further down in your code are not initiated until earlier tasks have completed" you use the normal (synchronous) flow where each command is executed sequentially. Asynchronous code allows you to break this sequence: start a long running function (AJAX call to an external service) and continue running the rest of the code in parallel.
-
[3] == [3]
-
3 == '3'
-
3 != '3'
-
3 === '3'
- 5thItem
- firstName
- grand total
- function
-
cancel()
-
stop()
-
preventDefault()
-
prevent()
-
attachNode()
-
getNode()
-
querySelector()
-
appendChild()
-
break
-
pass
-
skip
-
continue
-
(a,b) => c
-
a, b => {return c;}
-
a, b => c
-
{ a, b } => c
Q65. Which concept is defined as a template that can be used to generate different objects that share some shape and/or behavior?
- class
- generator function
- map
- proxy
-
! This is a comment
-
# This is a comment
-
\\ This is a comment
-
// This is a comment
Reference comments in javascript
Q67. If you attempt to call a value as a function but the value is not a function, what kind of error would you get?
- TypeError
- SystemError
- SyntaxError
- LogicError
- create()
- new()
- constructor()
- init()
Reference javascript constructors
let a = 5;
console.log(++a);
- 4
- 10
- 6
- 5
Q70. You've written the event listener shown below for a form button, but each time you click the button, the page reloads. Which statement would stop this from happening?
button.addEventListener(
'click',
function (e) {
button.className = 'clicked';
},
false,
);
-
e.blockReload();
-
button.preventDefault();
-
button.blockReload();
-
e.preventDefault();
Reference events in javascript
-
function() { console.log('lorem ipsum'); }()();
-
function() { console.log('lorem ipsum'); }();
-
(function() { console.log('lorem ipsum'); })();
Reference what is an Immediately Invoked Function Expression
-
Document.querySelector('img')
-
Document.querySelectorAll('<img>')
-
Document.querySelectorAll('img')
-
Document.querySelector('<img>')
- To use ES6 syntax
- To start tasks that might take some time without blocking subsequent tasks from executing immediately
- To ensure that parsers enforce all JavaScript syntax rules when processing your code
- To ensure that tasks further down in your code aren't initiated until earlier tasks have completed
- DELETE
- GET
- PATCH
- POST
Q75. Which event is fired on a text field within a form when a user tabs to it, or clicks or touches it?
- focus
- blur
- hover
- enter
function logThis() {
console.log(this);
}
logThis();
- function
- undefined
- Function.prototype
- window
Reference what is the javascript window
const Greeting = ({ name }) => <h1>Hello {name}!</h1>;
-
class Greeting extends React.Component { render() { return <h1>Hello {this.props.name}!</h1>; } }
-
class Greeting extends React.Component { constructor() { return <h1>Hello {this.props.name}!</h1>; } }
-
class Greeting extends React.Component { <h>Hello {this.props.name}!</h>; } }
-
class Greeting extends React.Component { render({ name }) { return <h1>Hello {name}!</h1>; } }
useEffect(() => {
// do things
}, []);
- componentWillUnmount
- componentDidUpdate
- render
- componentDidMount
var obj;
console.log(obj);
-
ReferenceError: obj is not defined
-
{}
-
undefined
-
null
Reference working with objects
class TaxCalculator {
static calculate(total) {
return total * 0.05;
}
}
- calculate(50);
- new TaxCalculator().calculate($50);
- TaxCalculator.calculate(50);
- new TaxCalculator().calculate(50);
Reference functions in javascript
const foo = {
bar() {
console.log('Hello, world!');
},
name: 'Albert',
age: 26,
};
- The function bar needs to be defined as a key/value pair.
- Trailing commas are not allowed in JavaScript.
- Functions cannot be declared as properties of objects.
- Nothing, there are no errors.
console.log('I');
setTimeout(() => {
console.log('love');
}, 0);
console.log('Javascript!');
- .
I
Javascript!
love
- .
love
I
Javascript!
-
The output may change with each execution of code and cannot be determined.
-
.
I
love
Javascript!
Reference https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/setTimeout#reasons_for_delays_longer_than_specified especially see the 'late timeouts' section.
const foo = [1, 2, 3];
const [n] = foo;
console.log(n);
- 1
- undefined
- NaN
- Nothing--this is not proper JavaScript syntax and will throw an error.
Reference array deconstruction
const foo = {
name: 'Albert',
};
- delete name from foo;
- delete foo.name;
- del foo.name;
- remove foo.name;
Reference working with objects
- There is no difference.
- The
forEach()
method returns a single output value, whereas themap()
method performs operation on each value in the array. - The map() methods returns a new array with a transformation applied on each item in the original array, whereas the
forEach()
method iterates through an array with no return value. - The
forEach()
methods returns a new array with a transformation applied on each item in the original array, whereas themap()
method iterates through an array with no return value.
function makeAdder(x) {
return function (y) {
return x + y;
};
}
var addFive = makeAdder(5);
console.log(addFive(3));
- overloading
- closure
- currying
- overriding
-
<script></script>
-
<js></js>
-
<javascript></javascript>
-
<code></code>
Q88. If your app receives data from a third-party API, which HTTP response header must the server specify to allow exceptions to the same-origin policy?
- Security-Mode
- Access-Control-Allow-Origin
- Different-Origin
- Same-Origin
Reference Cross-Origin Resource Sharing
let rainForests = ['Amazon', 'Borneo', 'Cerrado', 'Congo'];
rainForests.splice(0, 2);
console.log(rainForests);
-
["Amazon","Borneo","Cerrado","Congo"]
-
["Cerrado", "Congo"]
-
["Congo"]
-
["Amazon","Borneo"]
Q91. Which missing line would allow you to create five variables(one,two,three,four,five) that correspond to their numerical values (1,2,3,4,5)?
const numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
//MISSING LINE
-
const [one,two,three,four,five]=numbers
-
const {one,two,three,four,five}=numbers
-
const [one,two,three,four,five]=[numbers]
-
const {one,two,three,four,five}={numbers}
const obj = {
a: 1,
b: 2,
c: 3,
};
const obj2 = {
...obj,
a: 0,
};
console.log(obj2.a, obj2.b);
- Nothing, it will throw an error
- 0 2
- undefined 2
- undefined 2
let animals = ['jaguar', 'eagle'];
//Missing Line
console.log(animals.pop()); //Prints jaguar
-
animals.filter(e => e === "jaguar");
-
animals.reverse();
-
animals.shift();
-
animals.pop();
Note: this question has two correct answers.
Reference Javascript Array Reverse
//Missing Line
for (var i = 0; i < vowels.length; i++) {
console.log(vowels[i]);
//Each letter printed on a separate line as follows;
//a
//e
//i
//o
//u
}
-
let vowels = "aeiou".toArray();
-
let vowels = Array.of("aeiou");
-
let vowels = {"a", "e", "i", "o", "u"};
-
let vowels = "aeiou";
const x = 6 % 2;
const y = x ? 'One' : 'Two';
console.log(y);
- undefined
- One
- true
- Two
let matrix = [["You","Can"],["Do","It"],["!","!","!"]];
-
matrix[1[2]]
-
matrix[1][1]
-
matrix[1,2]
-
matrix[1][2]
const animals = ['Rabbit', 'Dog', 'Cat'];
animals.unshift('Lizard');
- It adds "Lizard" to the start of the animals array.
- It adds "Lizard" to the end of the animals array.
- It replaces "Rabbit" with "Lizard" in the animals array.
- It replaces "Cat" with "Lizard" in the animals array.
let x = 6 + 3 + '3';
console.log(x);
- 93
- 12
- 66
- 633
Q99. Which statement can take a single expression as input and then look through a number of choices until one that matches that value is found?
- else
- when
- if
- switch
var sound = 'grunt';
var bear = { sound: 'roar' };
function roar() {
console.log(this.sound);
}
-
bear.bind(roar);
-
roar.bind(bear);
-
roar.apply(bear);
-
bear[roar]();
Q101. Which choice is a valid example of an arrow function, assuming c is defined in the outer scope?
-
a, b => { return c; }
-
a, b => c
-
{ a, b } => c
-
(a,b) => c
//some-file.js
export const printMe = (str) => console.log(str);
-
import printMe from './some-file';
-
import { printMe } from './some-file';
-
import default as printMe from './some-file';
-
const printMe = import './some-file';
Reference importing libraries in javascript
const arr1 = [2, 4, 6];
const arr2 = [3, 5, 7];
console.log([...arr1, ...arr2]);
-
[2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
-
[3,5,7,2,4,6]
-
[3, 5, 7, 2, 4, 6]
-
[[2, 4, 6], [3, 5, 7]]
-
[2, 4, 6, 3, 5, 7]
-
done()
-
then()
-
finally()
-
catch()
-
array.slice()
-
array.shift()
-
array.push()
-
array.replace()
- do…while
- forEach
- while
- for
console.log(typeof 'blueberry');
-
string
-
array
-
Boolean
-
object
//HTML Markup
<div id="A">
<div id="B">
<div id="C">Click Here</div>
</div>
</div>
//JavaScript
document.querySelectorAll('div').forEach((e) => {
e.onclick = (e) => console.log(e.currentTarget.id);
});
- C B A
- A
- C
- A B C
const myNumbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7];
const myFunction = (arr) => {
return arr.map((x) => x + 3).filter((x) => x < 7);
};
console.log(myFunction(myNumbers));
-
[4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
-
[4,5,6,7]
-
[1,2,3,4,5,6]
-
[4,5,6]
Reference functions in javascript
let rainForestAcres = 10;
let animals = 0;
while (rainForestAcres < 13 || animals <= 2) {
rainForestAcres++;
animals += 2;
}
console.log(animals);
- 2
- 4
- 6
- 8
Reference MDN JavaScript Looping code
let cipherText = [...'YZOGUT QGMORTZ MTRHTILS'];
let plainText = '';
/* Missing Snippet */
console.log(plainText); //Prints YOU GOT THIS
- A
for (let key of cipherText.keys()) {
plainText += key % 2 === 0 ? key : ' ';
}
- B
for (let [index, value] of cipherText.entries()) {
plainText += index % 2 !== 0 ? value : '';
}
- C
for (let [index, value] of cipherText.entries()) {
plainText += index % 2 === 0 ? value : '';
}
- D
for (let value of cipherText) {
plainText += value;
}
- Reference MDN JavaScript Destructuring
- Reference MDN JavaScript Array entries
- Reference MDN JavaScript Remainder/Modulo
var pokedex = ['Snorlax', 'Jigglypuff', 'Charmander', 'Squirtle'];
pokedex.pop();
console.log(pokedex.pop());
- Charmander
- Jigglypuff
- Snorlax
- Squirtle
Explanation: The pop() method removes the last element from an array and returns that element. This method changes the length of the array.
Q113. Which statement can be used to select the element from the DOM containing the text "The LinkedIn Learning library has great JavaScript courses" from this markup?
<h1 class="content">LinkedIn Learning</h1>
<div class="content">
<span class="content">The LinkedIn Learning library has great JavaScript courses!</span>
</div>
- document.querySelector("div.content")
- document.querySelector("span.content")
- document.querySelector(".content")
- document.querySelector("div.span")
-
[]
-
undefined
-
0
-
null
const lion = 1;
let tiger = 2;
var bear;
++lion;
bear += lion + tiger;
tiger++;
-
line 5, because lion cannot be reassigned a value
-
line 6, because the += operator cannot be used with the undefined variable bear
-
line 5, because the prefix (++) operator does not exist in JavaScript
-
line 3, because the variable bear is left undefined
const person = { name: 'Dave', age: 40, hairColor: 'blue' };
const result = Object.keys(person).map((x) => x.toUpperCase());
- It will throw a TypeError.
-
["Name", "Age", "HairColor"]
-
["DAVE", 40, "BLUE"]
-
["NAME", "AGE", "HAIRCOLOR"]
let animals = ["eagle", "osprey", "salmon"];
let key = animal => animal === "salmon";
if(/* Insert Snippet Here */){
console.log("swim");
}
-
animals.every(key)
-
animals.some(key).length === 1
-
animals.filter(key) === true
-
animals.some(key)
Reference Array.prototype.some
class RainForest {
static minimumRainFall = 60;
}
let congo = new RainForest();
RainForest.minimumRainFall = 80;
console.log(congo.minimumRainFall);
-
undefined
-
None of these answers, as static is not a feature in Javascript.
-
60
-
80
Q119. How can you attempt to access the property a.b
on obj
without throwing an error if a is undefined?
let obj = {};
-
obj?.a.b
-
obj.a?.b
-
obj[a][b]
-
obj.?a.?b
Reference Optional chaining (?.)
if (true) {
var x = 5;
const y = 6;
let z = 7;
}
console.log(x + y + z);
- It will throw a
ReferenceError
aboutx
. - It will print
18
. - It will print
undefined
. - It will throw a
ReferenceError
abouty
.
const x = [1, 2];
const y = [5, 7];
const z = [...x, ...y];
console.log(z);
-
[1,2,5,7]
-
[[1, 2], [5, 7]]
-
[2,7]
-
[2,1,7,5]
const a = { x: 1 };
const b = { x: 1 };
-
a['x'] === b['x']
-
a != b
-
a === b
-
a.x === b.x
console.log(typeof 41.1);
-
Nothing. It resuults in a ReferenceError.
-
decimal
-
float
-
number
let scores = [];
scores.push(1, 2);
scores.pop();
scores.push(3, 4);
scores.pop();
score = scores.reduce((a, b) => a + b);
console.log(score);
-
3
-
4
-
6
-
7
let bear = {
sound: 'roar',
roar() {
console.log(this.sound);
},
};
bear.sound = 'grunt';
let bearSound = bear.roar;
bearSound();
-
Nothing is printed to the console.
-
grunt
-
undefined
-
roar
var cat = { name: 'Athena' };
function swap(feline) {
feline.name = 'Wild';
feline = { name: 'Tabby' };
}
swap(cat);
console.log(cat.name);
- undefined
- Wild
- Tabby
- Athena
var thing;
let func = (str = 'no arg') => {
console.log(str);
};
func(thing);
func(null);
- null no arg
- no arg no arg
- null null
- no arg null
const myFunc = () => {
const a = 2;
return () => console.log('a is ' + a);
};
const a = 1;
const test = myFunc();
test();
- a is 1
- a is undefined
- It won't print anything.
- a is 2
const myFunc = (num1, num2 = 2, num3 = 2) => {
return num1 + num2 + num3;
};
let values = [1, 5];
const test = myFunc(2, ...values);
console.log(test);
- 8
- 6
- 2
- 12
var flagsJSON =
'{ "countries" : [' +
'{ "country":"Ireland" , "flag":"🇮🇪" },' +
'{ "country":"Serbia" , "flag":"🇷🇸" },' +
'{ "country":"Peru" , "flag":"🇵🇪" } ]}';
var flagDatabase = JSON.parse(flagsJSON);
- flagDatabase.countries[1].flag
- flagDatabase.countries[0].flag
- flagDatabase[1].flag
- flagsJSON.countries[0].flag
let conservation = true;
let deforestation = false;
let acresOfRainForest = 100;
if (/* Snipped goes here */){
++acresOfRainForest;
}
- conservation && !deforestation
- !deforestation && !conservation
- !conservation || deforestation
- deforestation && conservation || deforestation
- Boolean("false")
- Boolean("")
- Boolean(0)
- Boolean(NaN)
- JSON.parse()
- JSON.fromString();
- JSON.stringify()
- JSON.toObject()
- attachNode()
- appendChild()
- querySelector()
- getNode()
Q135. How would you add a data item named animal with a value of sloth to local storage for the current domain?
- LocalStorage.setItem("animal","sloth");
- document.localStorage.setItem("animal","sloth");
- localStorage.setItem({animal:"sloth"});
- localStorage.setItem("animal","sloth");
let cat = Object.create({ type: 'lion' });
cat.size = 'large';
let copyCat = { ...cat };
cat.type = 'tiger';
console.log(copyCat.type, copyCat.size);
- tiger large
- lion undefined
- undefined large
- lion large
let animals = [{ type: 'lion' }, 'tiger'];
let clones = animals.slice();
clones[0].type = 'bear';
clones[1] = 'sheep';
console.log(animals[0].type, clones[0].type);
console.log(animals[1], clones[1]);
- bear bear tiger sheep
- lion bear sheep sheep
- bear bear tiger tiger
- lion bear tiger sheep
a=5;
b=4;
alert(a++(+(+(+b))));
- 18
- 10
- 9
- 20
Q139. What fragment could you add to this code to make it output "{"type": "tiger"}" to the console?
let cat = { type: "tiger", size: "large" };
let json = /* Snippet here */;
console.log(json); // print {"type":"tiger"}
-
cat.toJSON("type");
-
JSON.stringify(cat, ["type"]);
-
JSON.stringify(cat);
-
JSON.stringify(cat, /type/);
- document.getNode();
- document.getElementsByClassName();
- document.querySelectorAll();
- document.querySelector();
let cat = {type: "tiger", size: "large"};
let json= /_ Snippet Here _/;
console.log(json); //prints {"type": "tiger"}
- JSON.sringify(cat);
- JSON.sringify(cat, ["type"]);
- JSON.sringify(cat, /type/);
- cat.toJSON("type");
- node
- instance variable
- prototype
- accessor
- Date
- FileUpload
- Function
- All of the above
const obj1 = { first: 20, second: 30, first: 50 };
console.log(obj1);
- first: 30 , second: 50
- first: 50 , second: 30
- first: 30 , second: 20
- None of the above
- Base Object
- All objects have prototype
- None of the objects have prototype
- None of the above
- Used to spread iterables to individual elements
- Describe datatype of undefined
- No such operator exists
- None of the above
- clearInterval
- clearTimer
- intervalOver
- None of the above
print(typeof NaN);
- Object
- Number
- String
- None of the above
<script type="text/javascript">a = 5 + "9"; document.write(a);</script>
- Compilation Error
- 14
- Runtime Error
- 59
- document.write()
- console.log()
- window.alert()
- all of the above