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Start your free trialCordez Coleman
Courses Plus Student 1,231 PointsUse the document.write() function
Maybe i'm not understanding the concept of the document.write(). I've tried doing the code in different ways and i'm just not understanding what i'm doing wrong.
var player = 'Jasmine'
document.write('player');
<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
<title>JavaScript Basics</title>
</head>
<body>
<script src="app.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
2 Answers
Tyler Durden
2,406 PointsYep, when ever you use a method and want to pass a variable through it, you just put the variable without any quotes.
When you put the quotes, the method thinks its a string, so it will just output "player".
So if var blah = 4; and you want to output that, just:
document.write(blah);
Oh, and by the way, you should really get used to using document.getElementById('the id name in your HTML where you want this to output to').innerHTML = whatever you want
You basically add an id="name of your choice" to anywhere on your HTML skeleton where you want your output of your JavaScript to be displayed. The document.write(); is super 1990's.
So you could have a <div> </div> on your HTML page that you want content to be displayed, so you could do:
<div id = 'output'> </div>
Then, in your javascript, you could "target it" by using getElementById, like this:
var num1 = 5;
var num2 = 7;
if(num1 > num2) {
document.getElementById('output').innerHTML = num1 + ' is bigger than ' + num2;
}
else {
document.getElementById('output').innerHTML = num2+ ' is less than ' + num1;
}
So yeah that's how you use it. Good luck!
Cordez Coleman
Courses Plus Student 1,231 PointsThank you so much.
Steven Parker
231,271 PointsSteven Parker
231,271 PointsNote that most of these comments apply to the code that was provided by the challenge and not the part written by the student.