Create a JavaScript function expression that meets the following requirements: _spellCorrection( string1, string2 ) • Authored using function expression syntax (constant name _spellCorrection) • Receives two strings, the first argument is a correct string, the second argument is an incorrect string. • The first argument, the correct string, represents what is supposed to be typed • The second argument, the incorrect string, represents what was provided • The function returns an array of all keys that were missed (what were supposed to be provided) o The returned array should be ordered by when they first appear in the sentence • Only one broken key per letter should be listed (see example 6) • If second argument, is greater in length than the first argument, the function simply returns “invalid” in the returned array (see example 5). • The first argument could be greater in length than the second (see example 2, example 3) • Console log output is NOT permitted. • The function should pass each of the illustrated examples below at a minimum. _spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GBC”) → [“”] _spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GB”) → [“C”] _spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GC”) → [“B”, “C”] _spellCorrection(“GB C”, “GC”) → [“B”, “ ”, “C”] _spellCorrection(“GB”, “GBC”) → [“invalid”] _spellCorrection(“happy birthday”, “hawwy birthday”) → [“p”] _spellCorrection(“starry night”, “starrq light”) → [“y”, “n”] _spellCorrection(“beethoven”, “affthoif5”) → [“b”, “e” ,”v”, “n”]
Create a JavaScript function expression that meets the following requirements:
_spellCorrection( string1, string2 )
• Authored using function expression syntax (constant name _spellCorrection)
• Receives two strings, the first argument is a correct string, the second argument is an incorrect string.
• The first argument, the correct string, represents what is supposed to be typed
• The second argument, the incorrect string, represents what was provided
• The function returns an array of all keys that were missed (what were supposed to be provided)
o The returned array should be ordered by when they first appear in the sentence
• Only one broken key per letter should be listed (see example 6)
• If second argument, is greater in length than the first argument, the function simply returns “invalid” in the returned array (see example 5).
• The first argument could be greater in length than the second (see example 2, example 3)
• Console log output is NOT permitted.
• The function should pass each of the illustrated examples below at a minimum.
_spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GBC”) → [“”]
_spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GB”) → [“C”]
_spellCorrection(“GBC”, “GC”) → [“B”, “C”]
_spellCorrection(“GB C”, “GC”) → [“B”, “ ”, “C”]
_spellCorrection(“GB”, “GBC”) → [“invalid”]
_spellCorrection(“happy birthday”, “hawwy birthday”) → [“p”]
_spellCorrection(“starry night”, “starrq light”) → [“y”, “n”]
_spellCorrection(“beethoven”, “affthoif5”) → [“b”, “e” ,”v”, “n”]
Step by step
Solved in 2 steps