We've been tasked with building out the behavior for a digital stopwatch, the interface for which is in index.html.
Here's a working version of the app.
- When "Start" is clicked, the text "Stop Watch" should be replaced by "Time elapsed: 0", and the count should increment every second.
- When "Reset" is clicked, the text should return to "Stop Watch"
- When "Pause" is clicked, the text should say "Time elapsed: 1", but stop incrementing.
This is a tough assignment, so don't stress over meeting all the requirements. Just take it step by step and try to meet the benchmarks below in order.
- Create Javascript selectors that target each of the timer buttons.
- Create click handlers (empty, for now) for each of the timer buttons.
- Instantiate
secondsandtimerIdvariables for your timer. The latter will make more sense after reading up onsetInterval(). - Create an
updateTime()function that increments thesecondscounter and inserts that value into the<h1>element withid="timer". - Inside your click handler for the start button...
- Replace "Stop Watch" in the HTML with the content of the
secondsvariable. - Use
setInterval()to increment the timer by 1 every second.
- Inside your click handler for the pause button...
- Stop -- but do not reset! -- the timer using
clearInterval().
- Once again, inside your click handler for the start button...
- Make sure the timer starts back up when you hit the "Start" button after hitting "Pause".
- Inside your click handler for the reset button...
- Stop the timer using
clearInterval(). - Reset the timer.
- Replace the time in your HTML with the original "Stop Watch" text.
The MDN documentation for JavaScript Timers is helpful. Check out the specific documentation for setInterval and clearInterval.
Reformat your timer so that everything in your timers.js file -- variables and functions -- are part of a global object. It would look something like...
// Start of .js file
var timer = {
// All your code goes in here...
}