I wanted to try using template literals and it’s not working: it’s displaying the literal variable names, instead of the values. I am using Chrome v50.0.2 (and jQuery).
Example
console.log('categoryName: ${this.categoryName}ncategoryElements: ${this.categoryElements} ');
Output
${this.categoryName} categoryElements: ${this.categoryElements}
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Answer
JavaScript template literals require backticks, not straight quotation marks.
You need to use backticks (otherwise known as “grave accents” – which you’ll find next to the 1 key if you’re using a QWERTY keyboard) – rather than single quotes – to create a template literal.
Backticks are common in many programming languages but may be new to JavaScript developers.
Example:categoryName="name"; categoryElements="element"; console.log(`categoryName: ${this.categoryName}ncategoryElements: ${categoryElements} `)
VM626:1 categoryName: name categoryElements: element