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Start your free trialVladimir Lapcevic
6,363 PointsPlease provide me the solution.
What is wrong with my line 1 in app.js?
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Rainbow!</title>
</head>
<body>
<ul id="rainbow">
<li>This should be red</li>
<li>This should be orange</li>
<li>This should be yellow</li>
<li>This should be green</li>
<li>This should be blue</li>
<li>This should be indigo</li>
<li>This should be violet</li>
</ul>
<script src="js/app.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
const listItems = document.querySelector('#rainbow');
const colors = ["#C2272D", "#F8931F", "#FFFF01", "#009245", "#0193D9", "#0C04ED", "#612F90"];
for(var i = 0; i < colors.length; i ++) {
listItems[i].style.color = colors[i];
}
Edgars M
2,019 PointsInstead of selecting just the <ul> element, you need to select all of its children. You can do that by using querySelectorAll and targeting the <li> elements of #rainbow
1 Answer
Joseph Wasden
20,406 PointsYou need to update your selector to target the li's, not just the parent element.
const listItems = document.querySelector('#rainbow > li');
Also, querySelector() only selects the first matching selector, so you'll need to use querySelectorAll().
const listItems = document.querySelectorAll('#rainbow > li');
Good luck!
Vladimir Lapcevic
6,363 PointsThanks,
I need to refresh my HTML and CSS.
Cooper Runstein
11,850 PointsCooper Runstein
11,850 PointsRight now you're selecting the list itself, the <ul>, you want to select the children of the list, the <li>, notice that only the ul tag has the class rainbow, which is what the selector is pointing to now.