last day (17 days later) » 

04:30
Hello
hey, never knew about this. thanks for the help btw
This is a much easier way to communicate than posting comments on the questions
Yeah, definitely
So, the basic logic of your application
are you asking?
04:32
you have a single function, which decides what to do based on the value that is passed in
it can be called a bunch of times, basically every time someone presses a button
each button has a case
so the switch chooses which piece of code to execute based on whichever case comes in
all of them should effectively do the same thing, which is to append their value to the output box
so the output box will look like:
1+5/4*3+8
as an example
yes
i've gotten 1 to show up in the output box
and 11111
but for some reason, using the same structure, if I press 2, it does not show up
the only button that is different is the equate button, that evaluates the result
so you have a `case "two":
calc.output.value += '1';
break;
errr
do you mean += '2'?
04:36
yes, forgot to change that number lol
lol. ok. but right now, I have :

calc.output.value = "1";
break;
and that will give me any amount of 1s, ex: 111111
without the +
yep, and you added the second case statement, right?
switch (calcValue) {
case "one":
calc.output.value = "1";
break;
case "two":
calc.output.value = "2";
break;
yep that should output 2 when you press the 2 button (if you have an onClick on button two)
which I do,

<input type="button" name="one" value=" 1 " onclick="calcu(this.name)">
<input type="button" name="two" value=" 2 " onclick="calcu(this.name)">
but when I press two, it doesn't work
press '2' *
04:39
well, this is where I think I confused you before
I was confused already anyway. haha. Why then, when I press 2, it doesn't show up?
do you have calc.output.value = or calc.output.value += ?
= without the +
but it doesn't work with the + either
do you know how to use the debug console?
like console.log?
04:41
yes
I'm in Aptana so I have a preview of the site and a console.
right, so can we add some log statements so you can see what's happening when the buttons are pressed?
switch (calcValue) {
case "one":
calc.output.value = "1";
console.log("one was pressed");
break;
case "two":
calc.output.value = "2";
console.log("two was pressed");
break;
sure. where do I put the console.log
I just updated the code I pasted
ok, one sec
hmm, when I press 1, it adds to the output box, but the console window is not updated
case "one":
calc.output.value = "1";
console.log("one was pressed");
break;
04:45
also, before the switch, do console.log(calcValue);
nothing showing up in the console with that either
var calcu = function(calcValue) {
console.log(calcValue);
switch (calcValue) {
case "one":
calc.output.value = "1";
console.log("one was pressed");
break;
case "two":
calc.output.value = "2";
console.log("two was pressed");
break;
case "three":
calc.output.value = "3";
break;
case "add":
calc.output.value = "+";
break;
case "equate":
// use the math.eval() function from the Math.js math library to parse and evaluate the String with mathematics in it
calc.output.value = math.eval(calc.output.value);
var calcu = function(calcValue) {
	console.log(calcValue);
	switch (calcValue) {
	case "one":
		calc.output.value = "1";
		console.log("one was pressed");
		break;
	case "two":
		calc.output.value = "2";
		console.log("two was pressed");
		break;
	case "three":
		calc.output.value = "3";
		break;
	case "add":
		calc.output.value = "+";
		break;
	case "equate":
		// use the math.eval() function from the Math.js math library to parse and evaluate the String with mathematics in it
		calc.output.value = math.eval(calc.output.value);
you definitely need the +=, because = puts the right side into the left, += appends the right to the end of the left (for strings, anyway)
did you not save your script file lately perhaps?
save after every single little update
so you're saying

calc.output.value += "1";
yes
that doesn't explain why we aren't getting any log values though
like before, 1 is showing up, 2 isn't
04:49
and nothing in the console log
it makes absolutely no sense to me.
right, nothing
ok, what about this; instead of passing <input type="button" name="two" value=" 2 " onclick="calcu(this.name)">, what if you pass <input type="button" name="two" value=" 2 " onclick="calcu('two')">
case sensitive, of course; sorry about that
nope. same issue
1 showing up. 2 won't
the button two doesn't do anything or makes 1 show up?
nothing
1 shows up 1, 2 doesn't do anything
04:53
really sounds like it's not using the current script
ok, well I opened up the file into the browser and not through the preview in aptana
it works.
var aptana = garbage
I knew it had to be working. I know some C# and logically everything was making complete sense. lol
is it appending to the box the way you expect?
you were right the whole time. = will replace. += adds on
it was just aptana being stupid
and in chrome with the inspect element console open, the console logs show up too
right, happens sometimes, Visual Studio will do that to me too
Haven't had that in VS yet, but I imagine that's a big pain. ha
04:56
so you are getting a bit better understanding of how the switch statement is working, anyway?
there are a lot of other ways to do the same thing, and some of them have a lot less duplication of code
Yes. I knew how it works before from C#. I just couldn't figure out how to pass the value into the function. it uses the name for the cass
case*
but I think the point of learning to do it this way, even if you are duplicating yourself, is to really see how the language features work
right, I know that. My next assignment is to use if else statements.

If it were up to me, I would just be using for loops and arrays. I know the logic, I just don't know the language. and yes, you're right. He's teaching us the language.
good to know that previews can be incorrect. Ain't no testing like manual browser refresh testing. :/
some things in JavaScript are very different from C#, but for the most part, if you can do it in one language, you can do it in 10 other languages, once you learn where the { [ ( all go
yup. Thanks for the help! I appreciate it! Is there a way I can give you some points or rep or something?
05:01
I try to help answer questions to keep my skills up to snuff, not really because I care about the rep...
but thanks for the offer anyway
lol, okay. Gotta go do the rest, have a good night
Good night!
also, this chatroom log will be archived, so you can reference it later if you need to
but I think you have it under control :)

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