# non_start Given 2 strings, return their concatenation, except omit the first char of each. The strings will be at least length 1. ``` non_start("Hello", "There") -> "ellohere" non_start("java", "code") -> "avaode" non_start("shotl", "java") -> "hotlava" ``` This exercise was taken from [codingbat.com](https://codingbat.com/prob/p143825) and has been adapted for the Python language. There are many great programming exercises there, but the majority are created for Java. ## Starter Code ```python def non_start(a: str, b: str) -> str: pass result = non_start('Hello', 'There') print(result) ``` ## Tests ```python from main import non_start def test_non_start_1(): assert non_start('Hello', 'There') == 'ellohere' def test_non_start_2(): assert non_start('java', 'code') == 'avaode' def test_non_start_3(): assert non_start('shotl', 'java') == 'hotlava' def test_non_start_4(): assert non_start('ab', 'xy') == 'by' def test_non_start_5(): assert non_start('ab', 'x') == 'b' def test_non_start_6(): assert non_start('x', 'ac') == 'c' def test_non_start_7(): assert non_start('a', 'x') == '' def test_non_start_8(): assert non_start('kit', 'kat') == 'itat' def test_non_start_9(): assert non_start('mart', 'dart') == 'artart' ```