Let’s say, we have to write a function that takes in a binary string (consisting of only 0 and 1) and returns its inverse, all 0s replaced by 1 and 1s replaced by 0.
Let’s write the code for this function −
Example
const num = '1101'; const n = '11010111'; const inverseBinary = (binary) => { return binary.split("").map(el => { return `${1- parseInt(el, 10)}` }).join(""); }; console.log(inverseBinary(num)); console.log(inverseBinary(n));
Output
The output in the console will be −
0010 00101000