* fix(curriculum): update object example in Using Objects for Lookups * Update curriculum/challenges/english/02-javascript-algorithms-and-data-structures/basic-javascript/using-objects-for-lookups.md Co-authored-by: Mrugesh Mohapatra <1884376+raisedadead@users.noreply.github.com> * fix(curriculum): description update in Using Objects for Lookups Co-authored-by: Mrugesh Mohapatra <1884376+raisedadead@users.noreply.github.com>
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id, title, challengeType, videoUrl, forumTopicId, dashedName
| id | title | challengeType | videoUrl | forumTopicId | dashedName |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244ca | Using Objects for Lookups | 1 | https://scrimba.com/c/cdBk8sM | 18373 | using-objects-for-lookups |
--description--
Objects can be thought of as a key/value storage, like a dictionary. If you have tabular data, you can use an object to lookup values rather than a switch statement or an if/else chain. This is most useful when you know that your input data is limited to a certain range.
Here is an example of an article object:
const article = {
"title": "How to create objects in JavaScript",
"link": "https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/a-complete-guide-to-creating-objects-in-javascript-b0e2450655e8/",
"author": "Kaashan Hussain",
"language": "JavaScript",
"tags": "TECHNOLOGY",
"createdAt": "NOVEMBER 28, 2018"
};
const articleAuthor = article[author];
const articleLink = article[link];
const value = "title";
const valueLookup = article[value];
articleAuthor is the string Kaashan Hussain, articleLink is the string https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/a-complete-guide-to-creating-objects-in-javascript-b0e2450655e8/, and valueLookup is the string How to create objects in JavaScript.
--instructions--
Convert the switch statement into an object called lookup. Use it to look up val and assign the associated string to the result variable.
--hints--
phoneticLookup("alpha") should equal the string Adams
assert(phoneticLookup('alpha') === 'Adams');
phoneticLookup("bravo") should equal the string Boston
assert(phoneticLookup('bravo') === 'Boston');
phoneticLookup("charlie") should equal the string Chicago
assert(phoneticLookup('charlie') === 'Chicago');
phoneticLookup("delta") should equal the string Denver
assert(phoneticLookup('delta') === 'Denver');
phoneticLookup("echo") should equal the string Easy
assert(phoneticLookup('echo') === 'Easy');
phoneticLookup("foxtrot") should equal the string Frank
assert(phoneticLookup('foxtrot') === 'Frank');
phoneticLookup("") should equal undefined
assert(typeof phoneticLookup('') === 'undefined');
You should not modify the return statement
assert(code.match(/return\sresult;/));
You should not use case, switch, or if statements
assert(
!/case|switch|if/g.test(code.replace(/([/]{2}.*)|([/][*][^/*]*[*][/])/g, ''))
);
--seed--
--seed-contents--
// Setup
function phoneticLookup(val) {
let result = "";
// Only change code below this line
switch(val) {
case "alpha":
result = "Adams";
break;
case "bravo":
result = "Boston";
break;
case "charlie":
result = "Chicago";
break;
case "delta":
result = "Denver";
break;
case "echo":
result = "Easy";
break;
case "foxtrot":
result = "Frank";
}
// Only change code above this line
return result;
}
phoneticLookup("charlie");
--solutions--
function phoneticLookup(val) {
let result = "";
const lookup = {
alpha: "Adams",
bravo: "Boston",
charlie: "Chicago",
delta: "Denver",
echo: "Easy",
foxtrot: "Frank"
};
result = lookup[val];
return result;
}