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Start your free trialRaul Cisneros
7,319 PointsHavent been able to figure out how to incorporate the "for" loop, but its still somewhat working.
var quizQuestions = [
["How many eggs in one dozen?", 12],
["How many numbers on a telephone key pad?", 10],
["How many stars in our solar system?", 1]
];
var incorrect = 0;
var correct = 0;
var ques1 = prompt(quizQuestions[0][0]);
if (parseInt(ques1) === 12) {
correct++;
} else {
incorrect++;
}
var ques2 = prompt(quizQuestions[1][0]);
if (parseInt(ques2) === 10) {
correct++;
} else {
incorrect++;
}
var ques3 = prompt(quizQuestions[2][0]);
if (parseInt(ques3) === 1) {
correct++;
} else {
incorrect++;
}
document.getElementById("link").innerHTML = ("You had a total of " + correct + " correct answers.");
document.getElementById("link2").innerHTML = ("You had a total of " + incorrect + " incorrect answers.");
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsHere's a few hints:
- where you have 3 very similar sections of code you can use one loop instead
- the body of the loop would be similar to just one of the three sections
- you could use the loop index to select which question to show
- instead of a fixed value, you could also use the loop index to pick the value to compare with
If you still can't get it, proceed to the next video and see the teacher's example.
Raul Cisneros
7,319 PointsRaul Cisneros
7,319 PointsBeen burning too much time on this. Figured I better throw in the towel.