curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/basic-javascript/56533eb9ac21ba0edf2244aa.md
When JavaScript variables are declared, they have an initial value of undefined. If you do a mathematical operation on an undefined variable your result will be NaN which means <dfn>"Not a Number"</dfn>. If you concatenate a string with an undefined variable, you will get a <dfn>string</dfn> of undefined.
Initialize the three variables a, b, and c with 5, 10, and "I am a" respectively so that they will not be undefined.
a should be defined and have a final value of 6.
assert(typeof a === 'number' && a === 6);
b should be defined and have a final value of 15.
assert(typeof b === 'number' && b === 15);
c should not contain undefined and should have a final value of the string I am a String!
assert(!/undefined/.test(c) && c === 'I am a String!');
You should not change code below the specified comment.
assert(
/a = a \+ 1;/.test(__helpers.removeJSComments(code)) &&
/b = b \+ 5;/.test(__helpers.removeJSComments(code)) &&
/c = c \+ " String!";/.test(__helpers.removeJSComments(code))
);
// Only change code below this line
var a;
var b;
var c;
// Only change code above this line
a = a + 1;
b = b + 5;
c = c + " String!";
var a = 5;
var b = 10;
var c = "I am a";
a = a + 1;
b = b + 5;
c = c + " String!";