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Start your free trialSean Flanagan
33,235 PointsStage 3 challenge - my solution
Hi.
This is my answer.
$(document).ready(function () {
$.getJSON('../data/rooms.json', function (data) {
var statusHTML = '<ul class="bulleted">';
$.each(data,function (index, room) {
if (room.available === true) {
statusHTML +='<li class="available">';
} else {
statusHTML +='<li class="unavailable">';
}
statusHTML += room.name + '</li>';
});
statusHTML += '</ul>';
$('#roomList').html(statusHTML)
}); // end getJSON
}); // end ready
I would appreciate constructive feedback.
1 Answer
Steve Gallant
14,943 PointsThe first question is: did it work as you expected? I just completed the example - mine works and I did several things differently.
- I used different variables in this code block to avoid conflicting with those already established for the employees list.
- My ul class is "rooms" rather than "bulleted" to get the proper styling.
- The classes for the li elements should be "full" and "empty" to match the .json file.
- I think you are missing the room name/number before the closing li tag.
Hope it helps! Steve