Heads up! To view this whole video, sign in with your Courses account or enroll in your free 7-day trial. Sign In Enroll
Well done!
You have completed JavaScript Basics!
You have completed JavaScript Basics!
Preview
You've learned three different ways to output messages with JavaScript. Let's put these pieces together and write a small program using those methods.
Resources
alert()
– MDNconsole.log()
– MDNdocument.write()
– MDN- Other ways to clear the console
- Grammar and types – MDN
Code Snippet
alert("Hello. Thanks for visiting!");
console.log("Hello from the console.");
document.write("<h1>Welcome to my web page.</h1>");
Related Discussions
Have questions about this video? Start a discussion with the community and Treehouse staff.
Sign upRelated Discussions
Have questions about this video? Start a discussion with the community and Treehouse staff.
Sign up
All right, you've learned three different
ways to output messages with JavaScript,
0:00
a dialog box,
writing directly to the console, and
0:04
writing to the current web page.
0:08
Let's put these pieces together and write
a small program using these three methods.
0:09
If necessary,
clear the console to add new code.
0:13
First, type alert.
0:16
And in between quotation marks,
type the message Hello.
0:20
Thanks for visiting.
0:26
Now, I don't want to run this code yet, so
I'll press and hold down the shift key.
0:30
Then press enter to bring the cursor down
to the next line without running the code.
0:36
Next, type console.log and
0:40
provide it the message, Hello from
the console between quotation marks.
0:46
I'll again press Shift+Enter to bring
the cursor down to the next line.
0:55
And this time type document.write.
1:00
And here's something interesting, you can
even provide document.write markup or
1:04
HTML tags containing the element and
text to write to the page.
1:11
h1 tags for example.
1:15
In between the h1 tags I will write
the message welcome to my web page.
1:18
And that's it.
1:26
You can also copy these lines of code
from the teacher's notes with this video.
1:27
So now we have three lines of code,
1:31
which we can run by pressing the Enter or
Return key.
1:34
First, the alert dialog displays.
1:38
After clicking OK,
the message appears in the console and
1:41
the welcome heading appears on the page.
1:45
There are two things to
understand from this.
1:47
First, a program is a set of statements
that run one after the other.
1:50
Second, one statement needs to complete
before the next statement runs.
1:56
For example, the console.log
command which prints to the console
2:02
can't do its thing until
the first alert command finishes.
2:07
This also includes the user
closing the dialogue box.
2:12
Once that happens, the console.log
statement runs and finally document.write.
2:16
Keep in mind that you
won't often use alert or
2:24
even document.write in your projects.
2:27
I'm just using these commands now as
quick and simple ways to produce some
2:30
output as you learn the basics
of the JavaScript language.
2:34
You're also going to learn other common
methods for running JavaScript and
2:37
getting output when you're further
along in your learning journey.
2:41
All right, you've started your
JavaScript programming adventure,
2:43
written your first program,
and learned new commands.
2:47
In the next video, you'll learn where and
how to add JavaScript to web pages.
2:50
You need to sign up for Treehouse in order to download course files.
Sign upYou need to sign up for Treehouse in order to set up Workspace
Sign up