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Start your free trialdarrian thomas
8,481 PointsObject Challenge part II
Noticed some differences in our code but still the same output. I did not separate my programming from my student objects either but I understand the good organization practice behind doing that. I was just wondering why use a 'student var; ' from the video and a for loop instead of a for in loop?
var students = [
{
name: 'Dave',
track: 'Front End Development',
achievements: 158,
points: 14730
},
{
name: 'Jody',
track: 'iOS Development with Swift',
achievements: '175',
points: '16375'
},
{
name: 'Jordan',
track: 'PHP Development',
achievements: '55',
points: '2025'
},
{
name: 'John',
track: 'Learn WordPress',
achievements: '40',
points: '1950'
},
{
name: 'Trish',
track: 'Rails Development',
achievements: '5',
points: '350'
}
];
function print(message) {
var div = document.getElementById('output');
div.innerHTML = message;
}
var html = '';
for (student in students) {
html += '<h2>Student: ' + students[student].name + '</h2>';
html += '<p>Track: ' + students[student].track + '</p>';
html += '<p>Points: ' + students[student].points + '</p>';
html += '<p>Achievements: '+ students[student].achievements + '</p>';
}
print(html);
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,275 PointsThe student var with the conventional for loop allows for more concise property access. But you could get the benefits of both versions by using of instead of in:
for (student of students)
html += '<h2>Student: ' + student.name + '</h2>'
+ '<p>Track: ' + student.track + '</p>'
+ '<p>Points: ' + student.points + '</p>'
+ '<p>Achievements: ' + student.achievements + '</p>';
(I streamlined it a bit further by making the loop just one statement)