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JavaScript JavaScript Numbers Working with Numbers Create a Program with Math

Not the quickest in math, but was wondering if this was the correct calculation and code to find num of seconds in years

const secsPerMin = 60;
const minsPerHour = 60;
const hoursPerDay = 24;
const daysPerWeek = 7;
const weeksPerYear = 52;

const secondsPerDay = secsPerMin * minsPerHour * hoursPerDay;
console.log(`There are ${secondsPerDay} seconds in a day.`); 


const yearsAlive = 32;
console.log(`I've been alive for more than ${yearsAlive * weeksPerYear * daysPerWeek * secondsPerDay} seconds!`);

7 Answers

const secsPerMin = 60;
const minsPerHour = 60;
const hoursPerDay = 24;
const daysPerWeek = 7;
const weeksPerYear = 52;


const secsPerDay = secsPerMin * minsPerHour * hoursPerDay;
console.log(`There are ${secsPerDay} seconds in a day`);

const yearsAlive = 45;
const secsAlive = yearsAlive * weeksPerYear * daysPerWeek * secsPerDay;
console.log(`I've been alive for more than ${secsAlive} seconds!`);
benoit koch
benoit koch
3,875 Points

This is what i came up with.

const secsPerMin = 60; const minsPerHour = 60; const hoursPerDay = 24; const daysPerWeek = 7; const weeksPerYear = 52;

const secondsPerDay = secsPerMin * minsPerHour * hoursPerDay; console.log(There are ${secondsPerDay} seconds in a day.);

let yearsAlive; console.log(I've been alive for more than ${+86400 * +7 * +52 * +31} seconds!);

Steven Parker
Steven Parker
231,269 Points

I think the idea was to use the constants and not replicate the literal values. Also, what are the "+" symbols for?

benoit koch
benoit koch
3,875 Points

All good :) Oh, i think it was a mistake on my part, i was thinking for some reason that the system would read it as a string, so i added some precautions but i don't think that would of affected the conclusion. + is the quick form of parseInt. "The parseInt() function parses a string and returns an integer."

Steven Parker
Steven Parker
231,269 Points

No danger of digits being interpreted as a string. Also, be aware that "+" isn't quite an exact replacement for "parseInt". One big difference is how they handle an empty string.

Chris Conwell
Chris Conwell
2,268 Points

Your script will output as a string and how the total if you use template literals (); console.log(I've been alive for more than ${+86400 * +7 * +52 * +31} seconds!);

benoit koch
benoit koch
3,875 Points

Thanks for letting me know, really appreciate the advice! :)

Fabio Dolcemascolo
seal-mask
.a{fill-rule:evenodd;}techdegree
Fabio Dolcemascolo
Front End Web Development Techdegree Student 6,435 Points

const secsPerMin = 60; const minsPerHour = 60; const hoursPerDay = 24; const daysPerWeek = 7; const weeksPerYear = 52; const yearsAlive = 39;

const secondsPerDay = secsPerMin * minsPerHour * hoursPerDay; console.log(There are ${secondsPerDay} seconds in a day.);

const secondsPerWeek = secondsPerDay * daysPerWeek; console.log(There are ${secondsPerWeek} seconds in a week.);

const secondsPerYear = secondsPerWeek * weeksPerYear; console.log(There are ${secondsPerYear} seconds in a year.);

const secondsAlive = secondsPerYear * yearsAlive; console.log(I've been alive for more than ${secondsAlive} seconds!);

const secsPerMin = 60; const minsPerHour = 60; const hoursPerDay = 24; const daysPerWeek = 7; const weeksPerYear = 52;

const secondsPerDay = secsPerMin * minsPerHour*hoursPerDay console.log(There are ${secondsPerDay} seconds in a day.);

const yearsAlive = 36; const secondsPerYear = secondsPerDay * daysPerWeek* weeksPerYear console.log(I've been alive for more than ${secondsPerYear} seconds);