Learn Introductory JavaScript by Building a Pyramid Generator - Step 49

Tell us what’s happening:

I’m not sure what I’m missing. I thought to assign something to a variable means to use an equal sign and quotes.

Your code so far

const character = "#";
const count = 8;
const rows = [];

function padRow() {

}

// User Editable Region

padRow();
const call = "padRow";

// User Editable Region



for (let i = 0; i < count; i = i + 1) {
  rows.push(character.repeat(i + 1))
}

let result = ""

for (const row of rows) {
  result = result + row + "\n";
}

console.log(result);

Your browser information:

User Agent is: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/133.0.0.0 Safari/537.36 Edg/133.0.0.0

Challenge Information:

Learn Introductory JavaScript by Building a Pyramid Generator - Step 49

That’s right, you use quotes for strings, but the task wasn’t to assign the string "padRow" to your call variable.

To see the result of calling your padRow function, declare a call variable and assign your existing padRow call to that variable.

Figured it out. Thanks