Step 11
Take a moment and read through the code below; feel free to run (click on play
button) and experiment with it. Of course, I expect that you understand the code (since you've done programming in Java/C++).
// When the zzz button is clicked, we want to record the current time; let now = Date.now(); // Allow 14 minutes to fall asleep; let minute = 60 * 1000; // milliseconds now += 14 * minute; // Create six cycles of 90 minutes each; let hoursString = ""; for (let c = 1; c <= 6; c++) { now += 90 * minute; // a sleep cycle passed! let cycle = new Date(now); hoursString += cycle.toLocaleTimeString([], { hour: "2-digit", minute: "2-digit", }); if (c < 6) { hoursString += ", "; } } // Display the cycles as suggested wake-up times. console.log(hoursString);
We need to plug this code into the <script>
element:
<script>
function handleOnClickEvent() {
let output = document.querySelector(".output");
output.style.display = "block";
let hours = document.getElementById('hours');
// When the zzz button is clicked, we want to record the current time;
let now = Date.now();
// Allow 14 minutes to fall asleep;
let minute = 60 * 1000; // milliseconds
now += 14 * minute;
// Create six cycles of 90 minutes each;
let hoursString = "";
for (let c = 1; c <= 6; c++) {
now += 90 * minute; // a sleep cycle passed!
let cycle = new Date(now);
hoursString += cycle.toLocaleTimeString([], {
hour: "2-digit",
minute: "2-digit",
});
if (c < 6) {
hoursString += ", ";
}
}
// Display the cycles as suggested wake-up times.
hours.innerText = hoursString;
}
</script>
- Save the
index.html
file; refresh theindex
page in the browser. You must now have a working application.