TypeScript chapters

Chapter 11 of 17

Strings

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Text is everywhere

Almost every program reads, manipulates and prints text. TypeScript represents text as a string — a sequence of characters. Strings are immutable in many languages, meaning every "change" actually produces a brand new string and leaves the original alone.

const name = "PlayLearn";
console.log(name.length);
console.log(name.toUpperCase());
const greet = `Hello, ${name}!`;

Common string operations

Concatenation joins two strings together. Slicing extracts a portion. Searching finds whether a substring exists. Splitting breaks a string into pieces around a separator. Replacing swaps one substring for another. These five operations cover the vast majority of real-world text work.

Formatting and templates

When you need to drop variables into a string, prefer the language's built-in template syntax over manual concatenation. It is shorter, harder to get wrong, and produces clearer code that other developers can scan in a glance.

Try it yourself

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Output
Code runs on the Play with Coding execution engine — your code is saved locally for next time.