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JavaScript JavaScript and the DOM (Retiring) Traversing the DOM Solution: Using nextElementSibling

Tomas Rinblad
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.a{fill-rule:evenodd;}techdegree
Tomas Rinblad
Full Stack JavaScript Techdegree Student 12,427 Points

Same code as video, not responding on click

Hello.

I have done the exact same as in the code in the video, but when i click on down button it does not work anyway. Up and Remove works but down refuses to respond.

can u please check and see?

listUl.addEventListener("click", (event) => { if(event.target.tagName == "BUTTON"){

if(event.target.className == "remove"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  ul.removeChild(li);
  }

if(event.target.className == "up"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let prevLi = li.previousElementSibling;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  if(prevLi){
  ul.insertBefore(li,prevLi);
    }

  if(event.target.className == "down"){
    let li = event.target.parentNode;
    let nextLi = li.nextElementSibling;
    let ul = li.parentNode;
    if(letLi){
    ul.insertBefore(nextLi, li);
      }
  }
}

} } );

4 Answers

Andreas Nyström
Andreas Nyström
8,887 Points

You are missing a end bracket on the second if-statement. You're closing

  if(prevLi){
  ul.insertBefore(li,prevLi);
    }

But not the big if-statement. I'm guessing the other statement isnt suppose to go into the second if? If it is it should be an else if. Hope this helps.

So this:

if(event.target.className == "remove"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  ul.removeChild(li);
  }

if(event.target.className == "up"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let prevLi = li.previousElementSibling;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  if(prevLi){
  ul.insertBefore(li,prevLi);
    }

  if(event.target.className == "down"){
    let li = event.target.parentNode;
    let nextLi = li.nextElementSibling;
    let ul = li.parentNode;
    if(letLi){
    ul.insertBefore(nextLi, li);
      }
  }
}

Should probably be:

if(event.target.className == "remove"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  ul.removeChild(li);
  }

if(event.target.className == "up"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let prevLi = li.previousElementSibling;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  if(prevLi){
  ul.insertBefore(li,prevLi);
    }
}
if(event.target.className == "down"){
  let li = event.target.parentNode;
  let nextLi = li.nextElementSibling;
  let ul = li.parentNode;
  if(letLi){
  ul.insertBefore(nextLi, li);
    }
}
Steve Gallant
Steve Gallant
14,943 Points

Also, in your final if statement, you are testing for 'letLi', where I think you want to test for 'nextLi'?

I did the same thing. Sometimes when you copy (or borrow) code, even within the same project, it is important to get all the code you want. In this case it was just a } that was missing, and all the code stopped working.

Andrew Comiskey
PLUS
Andrew Comiskey
Courses Plus Student 3,339 Points

Now I can appreciate why we should format nested braces properly. Each for, if, etc statement should have a brace directly below it to ensure you don't miss any.