Common Mistakes in Your Code
Review this section to see how to avoid common mistakes when writing your code, such as spelling errors or not calling a function. Remember that some of the errors can be found and fixed using a linter program, as we discussed in Unit 2.
Solve common problems in your JavaScript code
The following links point to solutions to common problems you may encounter when writing JavaScript.
Common beginner's mistakes
Correct spelling and casing
If your code doesn't work and/or the browser complains that something is undefined, check that you've spelt all your variable names, function names, etc. correctly.
Some common built-in browser functions that cause problems are:
Correct | Wrong |
---|---|
getElementsByTagName() |
getElementByTagName() |
getElementsByName() |
getElementByName() |
getElementsByClassName() |
getElementByClassName() |
getElementById() |
getElementsById() |
Semi-colon position
You need to make sure you don't place any semi-colons incorrectly. For example:
Correct | Wrong |
---|---|
elem.style.color = 'red'; |
elem.style.color = 'red;' |
Functions
There are a number of things that can go wrong with functions.
One of the most common errors is to declare the function, but not call it anywhere. For example:
function myFunction() { alert('This is my function.'); };
This code won't do anything unless you call it with the following statement:
myFunction();
Function scope
Remember that functions have their own scope – you can't access a variable value set inside a function from outside the function, unless you declared the variable globally (i.e. not inside any functions), or return the value from the function.
Running code after a return statement
Remember also that when you return from a function, the JavaScript interpreter exits the function – no code after the return statement will run.
In fact, some browsers (like Firefox) will give you an error message in the developer console if you have code after a return statement. Firefox gives you "unreachable code after return statement".
Object notation versus normal assignment
When you assign something normally in JavaScript, you use a single equals sign, e.g.:
const myNumber = 0;
With Objects, however, you need to take care to use the correct syntax. The object must be surrounded by curly braces, member names must be separated from their values using colons, and members must be separated by commas. For example:
const myObject = { name: 'Chris', age: 38 }
Source: Mozilla, https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/JavaScript/Howto
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