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12,799 PointsCan't use the "value" property value on the variable definition?
I've always wondered this: why can't I just add
.value
to the element when I define the variable? Like this:
const input = document.getElementById('Input').value;
If I do that, then the function doesn't work.
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,268 PointsYou're right, that should work.
Are you sure that the ID of the element you want the value of is actually "Input"? The one in the video is "myTextInput".
Also, are you doing that inside the handler code? If you do it where myTextInput was being assigned in the video, it will always be an empty string.
ac10
12,799 Pointsac10
12,799 PointsYup, I used
Input
instead just to make it shorter.Right, that's what I meant. If I do
blahblah.value
within the function, it works. What I'm trying to understand is why the following won't work:Steven Parker
231,268 PointsSteven Parker
231,268 PointsIt "works" technically. But as I said before, if you do it there, input will always be an empty string because the value is being sampled when the page is first loaded.
But when you do it in the handler, the value is sampled after the user has had a chance to put something in the box and then click on the button.
ac10
12,799 Pointsac10
12,799 PointsAhhh ok I get it now. Thank you!