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JavaScript JavaScript Foundations Strings Methods

Grace Jang
Grace Jang
3,205 Points

I think there is a bug. I'm pretty sure I am doing step 3 properly with quick.charAt(10);

I think there is a bug. I'm pretty sure I am doing step 3 properly with quick.charAt(10);

1 Answer

Shawn Flanigan
PLUS
Shawn Flanigan
Courses Plus Student 15,815 Points

Grace,

You're close! Remember that with strings and arrays in JavaScript, indexes begin with 0, not 1. So...the first character in a string will have the index of 0, the second character will have the index of 1, and the 10th character will have an index of 9.

Hope this helps!