Write a function that takes 3 arguments, all integers. // It returns an array starting with the first number and increasing by the interval until it reaches // the second number, including the second number if it is part of the pattern. // For this exercise you can assume that the first integer is strictly less than the second integer. const countWithIntervals = (start, end, interval) => { } // Examples countWithIntervals(1, 10, 2) // returns [1, 3, 5, 7, 9] countWithIntervals(5, 20, 3) // returns [5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20] // Write a function that takes 2 arguments, both strings. // It returns as a number how many times the second string occurs within the first string. const subStringCount = (string, subString) => { } // Examples subStringCount("mississippi", "i") // returns 4 subStringCount("lions and tigers and bears", "and") // returns 2
Write a function that takes 3 arguments, all integers. // It returns an array starting with the first number and increasing by the interval until it reaches // the second number, including the second number if it is part of the pattern. // For this exercise you can assume that the first integer is strictly less than the second integer.
const countWithIntervals = (start, end, interval) => {
}
// Examples
countWithIntervals(1, 10, 2) // returns [1, 3, 5, 7, 9] countWithIntervals(5, 20, 3) // returns [5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20]
// Write a function that takes 2 arguments, both strings. // It returns as a number how many times the second string occurs within the first string.
const subStringCount = (string, subString) => {
}
// Examples
subStringCount("mississippi", "i") // returns 4 subStringCount("lions and tigers and bears", "and") // returns 2
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