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JavaScript JavaScript and the DOM (Retiring) Responding to User Interaction Event Delegation

David Dehghani
David Dehghani
6,992 Points

input elements selected by an addEventListener()

Not sure I'm digging out the input text selector.

index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <head>
        <title>JavaScript and the DOM</title>
    </head>
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" />
    <body>
        <section>
            <h1>Making a Webpage Interactive</h1>
            <p>JavaScript is an exciting language that you can use to power web servers, create desktop programs, and even control robots. But JavaScript got its start in the browser way back in 1995.</p>
            <hr>
            <p>Things to Learn</p>
            <ul>
                <li>Item One: <input type="text"></li>
                <li>Item Two: <input type="text"></li>
                <li>Item Three: <input type="text"></li>
                <li>Item Four: <input type="text"></li>
            </ul>
            <button>Save</button>
        </section>
        <script src="app.js"></script>
    </body>
</html>
app.js
let section = document.getElementsByTagName('input');

section.addEventListener('click', (event) => {
  if (event.target.tagName == 'INPUT') {
  event.target.style.backgroundColor = 'rgb(255, 255, 0)';
  }
});

1 Answer

Your if-statement is great. Use that without changing anything else.

They will very rarely have you edit code provided to you like the section variable. If they don't explicitly tell you to change it, then don't.

David Dehghani
David Dehghani
6,992 Points

I was closer than I thought. Definitely overthinking it!