JavaScript allows the use of both single (") and double ("") quotes to declare a string. Deciding which one to use generally comes down to personal preference, with some exceptions.
Having two choices is great when a string has contractions or another piece of text that's in quotes. Just be careful that you don't close the string too early, which causes a syntax error.
Here are some examples of mixing quotes:
<blockquote>// These are correct:<br>const grouchoContraction = "I've had a perfectly wonderful evening, but this wasn't it.";<br>const quoteInString = "Groucho Marx once said 'Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted.'";<br>// This is incorrect:<br>const uhOhGroucho = 'I've had a perfectly wonderful evening, but this wasn't it.';</blockquote>
Of course, it is okay to use only one style of quotes. You can escape the quotes inside the string by using the backslash (\) escape character:
<blockquote>// Correct use of same quotes:<br>const allSameQuotes = 'I\'ve had a perfectly wonderful evening, but this wasn\'t it.';</blockquote>
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## Instructions
<sectionid='instructions'>
Fix the string so it either uses different quotes for the <code>href</code> value, or escape the existing ones. Keep the double quote marks around the entire string.
testString: 'assert(code.match(/<ahref=\s*?("|\\")#Home\1\s*?>/g), "Your code should fix the quotes around the <code>href</code> value "#Home" by either changing or escaping them.");'