Pinned Repositories
admin-dashboard
Odin's Project: Admin Dashboard
battleship
calculator
css-exercises
data-structures-and-algorithms
expressBookReviews
form-js-validation
Build a browser form which collects Email, Country, Zip Code, Password and Password Confirmation fields. It should use live inline validation to inform the user whether a field is properly filled in or not. That means highlighting a field red and providing a helpful error message until it has been filled in properly. The form doesn’t need to actually submit, but you should give an error message if the button is pushed with any active errors or unfilled required fields. For the sake of this lesson, make sure all of the validation occurs in the JavaScript file. If all is well and the form is “submitted”, give the user a high five. Set up a blank HTML document Think about how you would set up the different form elements and their accompanying validators. What objects and functions will you need? A few minutes of thought can save you from wasting an hour of coding. The best thing you can do is whiteboard the entire solution before even touching the computer. Write the simple form elements. Add the JavaScript code that checks validation as the user progresses through the form. When a user leaves a form field, it should automatically validate that field. Test out all possible cases. Don’t forget to style validations with CSS by using the :valid and :invalid psuedo-classes!
IBM-CAD220EN-Back-end-Application-Development-with-Node.js-and-Express
javascript-exercises
Odin's Project
JavaScript30
30 Day Vanilla JS Challenge
danikvh's Repositories
danikvh/admin-dashboard
Odin's Project: Admin Dashboard
danikvh/battleship
danikvh/calculator
danikvh/css-exercises
danikvh/data-structures-and-algorithms
danikvh/expressBookReviews
danikvh/form-js-validation
Build a browser form which collects Email, Country, Zip Code, Password and Password Confirmation fields. It should use live inline validation to inform the user whether a field is properly filled in or not. That means highlighting a field red and providing a helpful error message until it has been filled in properly. The form doesn’t need to actually submit, but you should give an error message if the button is pushed with any active errors or unfilled required fields. For the sake of this lesson, make sure all of the validation occurs in the JavaScript file. If all is well and the form is “submitted”, give the user a high five. Set up a blank HTML document Think about how you would set up the different form elements and their accompanying validators. What objects and functions will you need? A few minutes of thought can save you from wasting an hour of coding. The best thing you can do is whiteboard the entire solution before even touching the computer. Write the simple form elements. Add the JavaScript code that checks validation as the user progresses through the form. When a user leaves a form field, it should automatically validate that field. Test out all possible cases. Don’t forget to style validations with CSS by using the :valid and :invalid psuedo-classes!
danikvh/IBM-CAD220EN-Back-end-Application-Development-with-Node.js-and-Express
danikvh/javascript-exercises
Odin's Project
danikvh/JavaScript30
30 Day Vanilla JS Challenge
danikvh/js-dynamic-interface-interactions
Practice JavaScript techniques
danikvh/Kaggle
danikvh/library
Odin's Project library
danikvh/odins-project
Odin's Project various project compilated
danikvh/recursion
danikvh/restaurant-page
Odin's Project: Restaurant Page
danikvh/sign-up-form
Odin's project sign up form
danikvh/testing
danikvh/tic-tac-toe
Odin's Project: Tic Tac Toe
danikvh/todo-list
Odin's Project: Todo List
danikvh/UPV-ComputerScience-ETSINF
University code
danikvh/weather-app
Odin's Weather App
danikvh/webpack
A project using webkit with different variations to practice.