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Start your free trialSarah Breidenbach
4,490 PointsWith console.log('setter called: ${owner}'); what are the $ and curly bracket for?
${owner}
2 Answers
Jennifer Nordell
Treehouse TeacherHi there! The dollar sign and the curly brackets are part of a "new-ish" type thing in JavaScript called a JavaScript Template Literal. They are really nice to use, and I highly recommend learning about them. Treehouse has a 9-minute workshop on them and I can almost guarantee it's worth your time. Take a look at it here.
But for a small example, consider this code:
var x = 10;
var y = 20;
If I then wanted to do a console.log()
to print out the results of the multiplication of those two numbers, I could do either:
console.log("The product of " + x + " and " + y + " is " + x * y);
Or I could do this:
console.log(`The product of ${x} and ${y} is ${x * y}`);
In both cases, the following string will be logged to the console: The product of 10 and 20 is 200. But take a look at how much the JavaScript Template literal simplifies all the concatenation and makes your code look cleaner.
Hope this helps!
Joseph Wasden
20,407 PointsThose are template strings. It's taking the value of an expression and retuning it. Check out the docs on template literals.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Template_literals