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+ 1

Javascript discount calculator

Can’t find the issue for the life of me. What am i doing wrong? function main(input) { var oldPrice = parseInt(input, 10) // Your code here var discount = (0.2 * oldPrice); var oldPrice = (oldPrice - discount); document.log(oldPrice); }

3rd Oct 2020, 5:39 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
13 Answers
+ 5
console.log is used to display something in the console, useful for debbuging purposes. document.write is an evil thing that browsers provide to override the content of a web page, please avoid it. "document" object is only available on browsers, SoloLearn's in-course challenges run in node.js playground, that's why document won't work.
3rd Oct 2020, 5:52 AM
Kevin ★
+ 2
Share your code. Open a new question or link it here if you want. Sasquatch6ft40 You can send your suggestion using the in-app feedback option. It's in the menu.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:07 AM
Kevin ★
+ 2
Oh, now I can see what you did. At line 2: inputString should be an empty string: let inputString = ""; Forget about the given code(it's just boilerplate to take input in node) and focus on the "//your code goes here:" part. Don't change anything else.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:18 AM
Kevin ★
+ 1
document.log ?
3rd Oct 2020, 5:44 AM
Kevin ★
+ 1
ohh console.log or document.write. well whats the difference between those two?
3rd Oct 2020, 5:45 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
+ 1
ok.. that kinda makes sense. im stuck on the very next quiz now though, ive already done the whole course and i still feel like they havent explained what i need to know for the challenges in the beginning.
3rd Oct 2020, 5:54 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
+ 1
Don't worry. Review the complete lesson where the challenge is located and you'll see what you need to know.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:02 AM
Kevin ★
+ 1
process.stdin.setEncoding('utf-8'); let inputString = 'name = oldpass type text'; let currentLine = 0; process.stdin.on('data', inputStdin => { inputString += inputStdin; }); process.stdin.on('end', _ => { inputString = inputString.replace(/\s*$/, '') .split('\n') .map(str => str.replace(/\s*$/, '')); main(); }); function readLine() { return inputString[currentLine++]; } function main() { var oldPass = readLine(); var newPass = readLine(); // Your code here console.log(newPass !== oldPass) } just caught the missing semicolon, but it didnt make a difference as thats something else that only seems to matter sometimes.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:07 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
+ 1
i got it by changing !== to ===, but i swear i had tried that before i even posted. idk, maybe im too tired to try this tonight. thanks for the help tho man!
3rd Oct 2020, 6:27 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
0
is that not a thing? i coulda sworn it had me do that on the last quiz
3rd Oct 2020, 5:44 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
0
i’ve been looking for a while now... it’s the password one, and i can only solve one half the tests or the other half depending on if i use != or ===
3rd Oct 2020, 6:03 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
0
it would be extremely helpful if they changed the color of text that referred to nameholders. like, var name = hi, if name was a different color so you would know you dont need the word ‘name’ to specify the type of variable, but that it’s whatever you want to name that variable.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:06 AM
Sasquatch6ft40
0
i didn’t change anything else. :( that’s definitely not cool. ill see if that fixes it. nah, that returned them all as failed. if it helps, the ones i can see that i failed failed bc of a capitalized letter. i thought doing !== instead of != would fix it, but it didnt.
3rd Oct 2020, 6:22 AM
Sasquatch6ft40