Skip to content

tca88/Sprint-Challenge--JavaScript

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

46 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Sprint Challenge: JavaScript Fundamentals

This challenge allows you to practice the concepts and techniques learned over the past week and apply them in a survey of problems. This Sprint explored JavaScript Fundamentals. During this Sprint, you studied variables, functions, object literals, arrays, this keyword, prototypes, and class syntax. In your challenge this week, you will demonstrate proficiency by completing a survey of JavaScript problems.

Instructions

Read these instructions carefully. Understand exactly what is expected before starting this Sprint Challenge.

This is an individual assessment. All work must be your own. Your challenge score is a measure of your ability to work independently using the material covered through this sprint. You need to demonstrate proficiency in the concepts and objectives introduced and practiced in preceding days.

You are not allowed to collaborate during the Sprint Challenge. However, you are encouraged to follow the twenty-minute rule and seek support from your PM and Instructor in your cohort help channel on Slack. Your work reflects your proficiency in JavaScript fundamentals.

You have three hours to complete this challenge. Plan your time accordingly.

Commits

Commit your code regularly and meaningfully. This helps both you (in case you ever need to return to old code for any number of reasons) and your project manager.

Description

You will notice there are several JavaScript files being brought into the index.html file. Each of those files contain JavaScript problems you need to solve. If you get stuck on something, skip over it and come back to it later.

In meeting the minimum viable product (MVP) specifications listed below, you should have a console full of correct responses to the problems given.

Self-Study Questions

Demonstrate your understanding of this week's concepts by answering the following free-form questions.

Edit this document to include your answers after each question. Make sure to leave a blank line above and below your answer so it is clear and easy to read by your project manager

  1. Describe the biggest difference between .forEach & .map.

    Answer In the ForEach method, a callback is used to access items in an array without creating a new one. The biggest difference between .forEach and .map is that map returns a new array of elements while in turn passing each element back to the callback.

  2. What is the difference between a function and a method?

    Answer Methods are functions, in that it’s a piece of code that is called by name, and can be passed parameters and arguments to operate on, but methods are associated with an object, and operates within the class it’s contained in.

  3. What is closure?

    Answer The formal definition is that it is the combination of a function and the lexical environment within which that function was declared. This means that closures are functions that refer to independent variables. The function in a closure remembers the environment that it was created in and can reach outward for context, referencing variables outside of its immediate scope.

  4. Describe the four rules of the 'this' keyword.

    Answer

    1. Window Binding: When in the global scope, the value of "this" will be the window/console object.
    2. Implicit binding: This means automatic binding, and that if you're invoking a method on an object, then the "this" context is bound to wherever it was invoked.
    3. New Binding: Whenever a constructor function is used, "this" is tied to the specific instance of the object that is created and returned by the constructor function.
    4. Explicit Binding: Whenever .apply(), .bind() or .call() methods are used, "this" is explicity defined and overwrites where the this keyword is pointing to.
  5. Why do we need super() in an extended class?

    Answer The super keyword is used to access and call functions and properties using the “this keyword” from the Parent. It’s the equivalent to Object.create.

Project Set up

Follow these steps to set up and work on your project:

  • Create a forked copy of this project.
  • Add PM as collaborator on Github.
  • Clone your OWN version of Repo (Not Lambda's by mistake!).
  • Create a new Branch on the clone: git checkout -b <firstName-lastName>.
  • Create a pull request before you start working on the project requirements. You will continuously push your updates throughout the project.
  • You are now ready to build this project with your preferred IDE
  • Implement the project on your Branch, committing changes regularly.
  • Push commits: git push origin <firstName-lastName>.

Follow these steps for completing your project:

  • Submit a Pull-Request to merge Branch into master (student's Repo).
  • Add your Project Manager as a Reviewer on the Pull-request
  • PM then will count the HW as done by merging the branch back into master.

Minimum Viable Product

Your finished project must include all of the following requirements:

Pro tip for this challenge: If something seems like it isn't working locally, copy and paste your code up to codepen and take another look at the console.

Task 1: Objects and Arrays

Test your knowledge of objects and arrays.

Task 2: Functions

This challenge takes a look at callbacks and closures as well as scope.

  • Use the functions.js link to get started. Read the instructions carefully!

Task 3: Prototypes

Create constructors, bind methods, and create cuboids in this prototypes challenge.

  • Use the prototypes.js link to get started. Read the instructions carefully!

Task 4: Classes

Once you have completed the prototypes challenge, it's time to convert all your hard work into classes.

  • Use the classes.js link to get started. Read the instructions carefully!

In your solutions, it is essential that you follow best practices and produce clean and professional results. Schedule time to review, refine, and assess your work and perform basic professional polishing including spell-checking and grammar-checking on your work. It is better to submit a challenge that meets MVP than one that attempts too much and does not.

Stretch Problems

There are a few stretch problems found throughout the files, don't work on them until you are finished with MVP requirements!

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors

Languages

  • JavaScript 96.2%
  • HTML 3.8%