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Tonight’s JavaScript Topics

Tonight’s JavaScript Topics. Conditional Statements: if and switch The Array Object Looping Statements: for, while and do-while. Conditional Statements in JavaScript. A conditional statement is a statement that runs a command or command block only when certain conditions are met.

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Tonight’s JavaScript Topics

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  1. Tonight’s JavaScript Topics Conditional Statements: if and switch The Array Object Looping Statements: for, while and do-while

  2. Conditional Statements in JavaScript A conditional statement is a statement that runs a command or command block only when certain conditions are met.

  3. The if Statement in JavaScript To test a single condition, use: if (condition) { commands } To test between two conditions, use: if (condition) { commands if condition is true } else { commands if otherwise }

  4. The if Statement in JavaScript (cont.) To test multiple conditions, use: if (condition 1) { first command block } else if (condition 2) { second command block } else if (condition 3) { third command block } else { default command block }

  5. The Switch Statement in JavaScript To test for different values of an expression, use: switch (expression) { case label1: commands1 break; case label2: commands2 break; case label3: commands3 break; ... default: default commands } The break statement terminates any program loop or conditional.

  6. A Complete Example • Let’s modify last week’s dice program to play a simplified version of craps: • if the dice roll is 2, 3 or 12, the user loses (craps) • if the dice roll is 7 or 11, the user wins • any other number and the user continues rolling • We’ll use if statements to do the job. As an outside-class exercise, try changing the program to use a switch statement.

  7. The Array Object in JavaScript • An array is a collection of data values organized under a single name • Each individual data value is identified by an index • To create an array: vararray = new Array(length); • To populate an element of the array: array[i] = value; • To create and populate an array: vararray = new Array(values); • To get the size of the array, use the property array.length

  8. Some Useful Array Methods

  9. A Program Example Using an Array • Let’s write a JavaScript program that does the following: • displays a button on the web page • whenever the user presses the button, a random fortune will be displayed to the user. • the list of “random” fortunes will be stored in an array

  10. Looping in JavaScript: The for Loop A program loop is a set of commands executed repeatedly until a stopping condition has been met for loops use a counter variableto track the number of times a block of commands is run To create a forloop, use: for (start at; continue until; update by){ commands to repeat }

  11. A for Loop Example

  12. Another for Loop Example forloops are often used to cycle through the different values contained within an array:

  13. Loops in JavaScript: The while Loop A while loop runs as long as a specific condition is true To create a whileloop, use: while(continue until condition){ commands to repeat } Example: var sum = 0; while(sum < 10) { sum = sum + Math.random(); }

  14. Loops in JavaScript: The do-while Loop A do-whileloop runs as long as a specific condition is true but the condition is at the end To create a do-whileloop, use: do { commands to repeat while(continue until condition); A do-while loop is always executed at least one time which isn’t necessarily true of while loops. Watch out for infinite loops!

  15. A Final Example: Rock, Paper, Scissors 1. For player 1, generate a random # between 1 and 3. 1= rock, 2=paper, 3-scissors. 2. For player 2, generate a random # between 1 and 3. 1= rock, 2=paper, 3-scissors. 3. Figure out which player wins by the rules: - paper covers rock (paper wins) - scissors cuts paper (scissors win) - rock breaks scissors (rock wins) - both players have the same item (tie) 4. Display an alert message like: “Player 1 has rock. Player 2 has paper. Player 2 wins.” 5. Keep playing if they tie until one player wins.

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