Lecture 8

Welcome!

  • In previous weeks, we introduced you to Python, a high-level programming language that utilized the same building blocks we learned in C. Today, we will extend those building blocks further in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
  • The internet is a technology that we all use.
  • Using our skills from previous weeks, we can build our own web pages and applications.
  • The ARPANET connected the first points on the internet to one another.
  • Dots between two points could be considered routers.

Routers

  • To route data from one place to another, we need to make routing decisions. That is, someone needs to program how data is transfered from point A to point B.
  • You can imagine how data could take multiple paths from point A and point B, such that when a router is congested, data can flow through another path.
  • TCP/IP are two protocols that allow computers to transfer data between them over the internet.
  • IP or internet protocol is a way by which computers can identify one another across the internet. Every computer has a unique address in the world. Addresses are in this form:

      #.#.#.#
    
  • Numbers range from 0 to 255. IP addresses are 32-bits, meaning that these addresses could accommodate over 4 billion addresses. Newer versions of IP addresses can accommodate far more computers!
  • In the real world, servers do a lot of work for us.
  • TCP, or transmission control protocol, is used to distinguish web services from one another. For example, 80 is used to denote HTTP and 443 is used to denote HTTPS. These numbers are port numbers.
  • When information is sent from one location to another, an IP address and TCP port number are sent.
  • These protocols are also used to fragment large files into multiple parts called packets. For example, a large photo of a cat can be sent in multiple packets. When a packet is lost, TCP/IP can request missing packets again from the origin server.
  • TCP will acknowledge when all the data has been transmitted and received.

DNS

  • It would be very tedious if you needed to remember an address number to visit a website.
  • DNS, or domain name systems, is a collection of servers on the internet that are used to route website addresses like harvard.edu to a specific IP address.
  • DNS simply hold a table or database that links specific, fully qualified domain names to specific IP addresses.

HTTP

  • HTTP or hypertext transfer protocol is an application-level protocol that developers use to build powerful and useful things.
  • When you see an address such as https://www.example.com you are actually implicitly visiting that address with a / at the end of it.
  • The path is what exists after that slash. For example, https://www.example.com/folder/file.html visits example.com and browses to the folder folder and then visits the file named file.html.
  • https in this address is the protocol that is used to connect to that web address. By protocol, we mean that HTTP utilizes GET or POST requests to ask for information from a server. For example, you can launch Google Chrome, right-click, and click inspect. When you open the developer tools and visit Network, selecting Preserve log, you will see Request Headers. You’ll see mentions of GET. This is possible in other browsers as well, using slightly different methods.
  • Generally, after making a request a server, you will receive the following in Response Headers:

      HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Content-Type: text/html
    
  • This approach to inspecting these logs may be a bit more complicated than need be. You can analyze the work of HTTP protocols at code.cs50.io. For example, type the following in your terminal window:

      curl -I https://www.harvard.edu
    

    Notice that the output of this command returns all the header values of the responses of the server.

  • Similarly, execute the following in your terminal window:

      curl -I http://www.harvard.edu
    

    Notice that the s in https has been removed. The server response will show that the response is 301 instead of 100, meaning that the website has permanently moved.

  • Further, execute the following command in your terminal window:

      curl -I https://harvard.edu
    

    Notice that you will see the same 301 response, providing a hint to a browser of where it can find the correct website.

  • Similar to 301, a code of 404 means that a specified URL has not been found. There are numerous other response codes, such as:

      200 OK
      301 Moved Permanently
      302 Found
      304 Not Modified
      304 Temporary Redirect
      401 Unauthorized
      403 Forbidden
      404 Not Found
      418 I'm a Teapot
      500 Internal Server Error
      503 Service Unavailable
    
  • It’s worth mentioning that 500 errors are always your fault as the developer. This will be especially important for next week’s pset, and potentially for your final project!
  • We can send more complicated commands to the server. For example, we can attempt the following:

      GET /search?q=cats HTTP/1.1
      Host: www.google.com
    

    Notice that not only are we specifying a path but also user input using the ? mark. q is used to denote query, passing cats to it.

  • If you manually type google.com/search?=cats into your web browser address bar, it will manually query Google for results related to cats.

HTML

  • HTML or hypertext markup language is made up of tags, each of which may have some attributes that describe it.
  • In your terminal, type code hello.html and write code as follows:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates HTML -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>hello, title</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            hello, body
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that the html tag both opens and closes this file. Further, notice the lang attribute, which modifies the behavior of the html tag. Also, notice that there are both head tags and body tags. Indentation is not required but does suggest a hierarchy.

  • You can serve your code by typing http-server. This serve is now available on a very long URL. If you click it, you can visit the website with your own code.
  • When you visit this URL, notice that the file name hello.html appears at the end of this URL.
  • The hierarchy of tags can be represented as follows:

    html code next to a heirarchy showing parent and child nodes

  • The browser will read your HTML file top to bottom and left to right.
  • Because whitespace is effectively ignored in HTML, you will need to use <p> paragraph tags to open and close a paragraph. Consider the following:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates paragraphs -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>paragraphs</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <p>
                Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus convallis scelerisque quam, vel hendrerit lectus viverra eu. Praesent posuere eget lectus ut faucibus. Etiam eu velit laoreet, gravida lorem in, viverra est. Cras ut purus neque. In porttitor non lorem id lobortis. Mauris gravida metus libero, quis maximus dui porta at. Donec lacinia felis consectetur venenatis scelerisque. Nulla eu nisl sollicitudin, varius velit sit amet, vehicula erat. Curabitur sollicitudin felis sit amet orci mattis, a tempus nulla pulvinar. Aliquam erat volutpat.
            </p>
            <p>
                Mauris ut dui in eros semper hendrerit. Morbi vel elit mi. Sed sit amet ex non quam dignissim dignissim et vel arcu. Pellentesque eget elementum orci. Morbi ac cursus ex. Pellentesque quis turpis blandit orci dapibus semper sed non nunc. Nulla et dolor nec lacus finibus volutpat. Sed non lorem diam. Donec feugiat interdum interdum. Vivamus et justo in enim blandit fermentum vel at elit. Phasellus eu ante vitae ligula varius aliquet. Etiam id posuere nibh.
            </p>
            <p>
                Aenean venenatis convallis ante a rhoncus. Nullam in metus vel diam vehicula tincidunt. Donec lacinia metus sem, sit amet egestas elit blandit sit amet. Nunc egestas sem quis nisl mattis semper. Pellentesque ut magna congue lorem eleifend sodales. Donec tortor tortor, aliquam vitae mollis sed, interdum ut lectus. Mauris non purus quis ipsum lacinia tincidunt.
            </p>
            <p>
                Integer at justo lacinia libero blandit aliquam ut ut dui. Quisque tincidunt facilisis venenatis. Nullam dictum odio quis lorem luctus, vel malesuada dolor luctus. Aenean placerat faucibus enim a facilisis. Maecenas eleifend quis massa sed eleifend. Ut ultricies, dui ac vulputate hendrerit, ex metus iaculis diam, vitae fermentum libero dui et ante. Phasellus suscipit, arcu ut consequat sagittis, massa urna accumsan massa, eu aliquet nulla lorem vitae arcu. Pellentesque rutrum felis et metus porta semper. Nam ac consectetur mauris.
            </p>
            <p>
                Suspendisse rutrum vestibulum odio, sed venenatis purus condimentum sed. Morbi ornare tincidunt augue eu auctor. Vivamus sagittis ac lectus at aliquet. Nulla urna mauris, interdum non nibh in, vehicula porta enim. Donec et posuere sapien. Pellentesque ultrices scelerisque ipsum, vel fermentum nibh tincidunt et. Proin gravida porta ipsum nec scelerisque. Vestibulum fringilla erat at turpis laoreet, nec hendrerit nisi scelerisque.
            </p>
            <p>
                Sed quis malesuada mi. Nam id purus quis augue sagittis pharetra. Nulla facilisi. Maecenas vel fringilla ante. Cras tristique, arcu sit amet blandit auctor, urna elit ultricies lacus, a malesuada eros dui id massa. Aliquam sem odio, pretium vel cursus eget, scelerisque at urna. Vestibulum posuere a turpis consectetur consectetur. Cras consequat, risus quis tempor egestas, nulla ipsum ornare erat, nec accumsan nibh lorem nec risus. Integer at iaculis lacus. Integer congue nunc massa, quis molestie felis pellentesque vestibulum. Nulla odio tortor, aliquam nec quam in, ornare aliquet sapien.
            </p>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that paragraphs start with a <p> tag and end with a </p> tag.

  • HTML allows for the representation of headings:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates headings (for chapters, sections, subsections, etc.) -->
    
    <html lang="en">
    
        <head>
            <title>headings</title>
        </head>
    
        <body>
    
            <h1>One</h1>
            <p>
                Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus convallis scelerisque quam, vel hendrerit lectus viverra eu. Praesent posuere eget lectus ut faucibus. Etiam eu velit laoreet, gravida lorem in, viverra est. Cras ut purus neque. In porttitor non lorem id lobortis. Mauris gravida metus libero, quis maximus dui porta at. Donec lacinia felis consectetur venenatis scelerisque. Nulla eu nisl sollicitudin, varius velit sit amet, vehicula erat. Curabitur sollicitudin felis sit amet orci mattis, a tempus nulla pulvinar. Aliquam erat volutpat.
            </p>
    
            <h2>Two</h2>
            <p>
                Mauris ut dui in eros semper hendrerit. Morbi vel elit mi. Sed sit amet ex non quam dignissim dignissim et vel arcu. Pellentesque eget elementum orci. Morbi ac cursus ex. Pellentesque quis turpis blandit orci dapibus semper sed non nunc. Nulla et dolor nec lacus finibus volutpat. Sed non lorem diam. Donec feugiat interdum interdum. Vivamus et justo in enim blandit fermentum vel at elit. Phasellus eu ante vitae ligula varius aliquet. Etiam id posuere nibh.
            </p>
    
            <h3>Three</h3>
            <p>
                Aenean venenatis convallis ante a rhoncus. Nullam in metus vel diam vehicula tincidunt. Donec lacinia metus sem, sit amet egestas elit blandit sit amet. Nunc egestas sem quis nisl mattis semper. Pellentesque ut magna congue lorem eleifend sodales. Donec tortor tortor, aliquam vitae mollis sed, interdum ut lectus. Mauris non purus quis ipsum lacinia tincidunt.
            </p>
    
            <h4>Four</h4>
            <p>
                Integer at justo lacinia libero blandit aliquam ut ut dui. Quisque tincidunt facilisis venenatis. Nullam dictum odio quis lorem luctus, vel malesuada dolor luctus. Aenean placerat faucibus enim a facilisis. Maecenas eleifend quis massa sed eleifend. Ut ultricies, dui ac vulputate hendrerit, ex metus iaculis diam, vitae fermentum libero dui et ante. Phasellus suscipit, arcu ut consequat sagittis, massa urna accumsan massa, eu aliquet nulla lorem vitae arcu. Pellentesque rutrum felis et metus porta semper. Nam ac consectetur mauris.
            </p>
    
            <h5>Five</h5>
            <p>
                Suspendisse rutrum vestibulum odio, sed venenatis purus condimentum sed. Morbi ornare tincidunt augue eu auctor. Vivamus sagittis ac lectus at aliquet. Nulla urna mauris, interdum non nibh in, vehicula porta enim. Donec et posuere sapien. Pellentesque ultrices scelerisque ipsum, vel fermentum nibh tincidunt et. Proin gravida porta ipsum nec scelerisque. Vestibulum fringilla erat at turpis laoreet, nec hendrerit nisi scelerisque.
            </p>
    
            <h6>Six</h6>
            <p>
                Sed quis malesuada mi. Nam id purus quis augue sagittis pharetra. Nulla facilisi. Maecenas vel fringilla ante. Cras tristique, arcu sit amet blandit auctor, urna elit ultricies lacus, a malesuada eros dui id massa. Aliquam sem odio, pretium vel cursus eget, scelerisque at urna. Vestibulum posuere a turpis consectetur consectetur. Cras consequat, risus quis tempor egestas, nulla ipsum ornare erat, nec accumsan nibh lorem nec risus. Integer at iaculis lacus. Integer congue nunc massa, quis molestie felis pellentesque vestibulum. Nulla odio tortor, aliquam nec quam in, ornare aliquet sapien.
            </p>
    
        </body>
    
    </html>
    

    Notice that <h1>, <h2>, and <h3> denote different levels of headings.

  • We can also create lists within HTML:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates (ordered) lists -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>list</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <ol>
                <li>foo</li>
                <li>bar</li>
                <li>baz</li>
            </ol>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that the <ol> tag creates an ordered list containing three items.

  • We can also create a table in HTML:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates table -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>table</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <table>
                <tr>
                    <td>1</td>
                    <td>2</td>
                    <td>3</td>
                </tr>
                <tr>
                    <td>4</td>
                    <td>5</td>
                    <td>6</td>
                </tr>
                <tr>
                    <td>7</td>
                    <td>8</td>
                    <td>9</td>
                </tr>
                <tr>
                    <td>*</td>
                    <td>0</td>
                    <td>#</td>
                </tr>
            </table>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Tables also have tags that open and close each element within.

  • Images can also be utilized within HTML:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates image -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>image</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <!-- https://www.harvard.edu/ -->
            <img alt="Harvard University" src="harvard.jpg">
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that src="harvard.jpg" indicates the path where the image file can be located.

  • Videos can also be included in HTML:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates video -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>video</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <!-- https://www.harvard.edu/ -->
            <video autoplay loop muted playsinline width="1280">
                <source src="halloween.mp4" type="video/mp4">
            </video>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that the width attribute defines the width of the video.

  • You can also link between various web pages:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates link -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>link</title>
        </head>
        <body>
           Visit <a href="image.html">Harvard</a>.
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that the <a> or anchor tag is used to make Harvard a linkable text.

  • Meta tags are used to hold information about the data within the HTML file. Consider the following:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates responsive design -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <meta name="viewport" content="initial-scale=1, width=device-width">
            <title>meta</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus convallis scelerisque quam, vel hendrerit lectus viverra eu. Praesent posuere eget lectus ut faucibus. Etiam eu velit laoreet, gravida lorem in, viverra est. Cras ut purus neque. In porttitor non lorem id lobortis. Mauris gravida metus libero, quis maximus dui porta at. Donec lacinia felis consectetur venenatis scelerisque. Nulla eu nisl sollicitudin, varius velit sit amet, vehicula erat. Curabitur sollicitudin felis sit amet orci mattis, a tempus nulla pulvinar. Aliquam erat volutpat.
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice this set of meta attributes makes this page mobile-friendly.

  • There are numerous meta key-value pairs that you can use:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates Open Graph tags -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <meta property="og:title" content="CS50">
            <meta property="og:description" content="Introduction to the intellectual enterprises of computer science and the art of programming.">
            <meta property="og:image" content="cat.jpg">
            <title>meta</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            ...
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that these key value pairs relate to the title and description of the web page.

  • You can also create forms reminiscent of Google’s search:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates form -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>search</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <form action="https://www.google.com/search" method="get">
                <input name="q" type="search">
                <input type="submit" value="Google Search">
            </form>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that a form tag opens and provides the attribute of what action it will take. The input field is included, passing the name q and the type as search.

  • We can make this search better as follows:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates additional form attributes -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>search</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <form action="https://www.google.com/search" method="get">
                <input autocomplete="off" autofocus name="q" placeholder="Query" type="search">
                <button>Google Search</button>
            </form>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that autocomplete is turned off. autofocus is enabled.

  • We’ve seen just a few of many HTML elements you can add to your site. If you have an idea for something to add to your site that we haven’t seen yet (a button, an audio file, etc.) try Googling “X in HTML” to find the right syntax!

CSS

  • CSS, or cascading style sheet, is a markup language that allows you to fine-tune the aesthetics of your HTML files.
  • In your terminal, type code home.html and write code as follows:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates inline CSS with P tags -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>css</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <p style="font-size: large; text-align: center;">
                John Harvard
            </p>
            <p style="font-size: medium; text-align: center;">
                Welcome to my home page!
            </p>
            <p style="font-size: small; text-align: center;">
                Copyright &#169; John Harvard
            </p>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that some style attributes are provided to the <p> tags. The font-size is set to large, medium, or small. Then text-align is set to center.

  • While correct, the above is not well-designed. We can remove redundancy by modifying our code as follows:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Removes outer DIV -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>css</title>
        </head>
        <body style="text-align: center">
            <div style="font-size: large">
                John Harvard
            </div>
            <div style="font-size: medium">
                Welcome to my home page!
            </div>
            <div style="font-size: small">
                Copyright &#169; John Harvard
            </div>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that <div> tags are used to divide up this HTML file into specific regions. text-align: center is invoked on the entire body of the HTML file.

  • It turns out that there is newer semantic text that is included in HTML. We can modify our code as follows:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Uses semantic tags instead of DIVs -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>css</title>
        </head>
        <body style="text-align: center">
            <header style="font-size: large">
                John Harvard
            </header>
            <main style="font-size: medium">
                Welcome to my home page!
            </main>
            <footer style="font-size: small">
                Copyright &#169; John Harvard
            </footer>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that the header and footer both have different styles assigned to them.

  • This practice of placing the style and information all in the same location is not good practice. We could move the elements of style to the top of the file as follows:

    <!-- Demonstrates class selectors -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <style>
    
                .centered
                {
                    text-align: center;
                }
    
                .large
                {
                    font-size: large;
                }
    
                .medium
                {
                    font-size: medium;
                }
    
                .small
                {
                    font-size: small;
                }
    
            </style>
            <title>css</title>
        </head>
        <body class="centered">
            <header class="large">
                John Harvard
            </header>
            <main class="medium">
                Welcome to my home page!
            </main>
            <footer class="small">
                Copyright &#169; John Harvard
            </footer>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice all the style tags are placed up in the head in the style tag wrapper. Also notice that we’ve assigned classes, called centered, large, medium, and small to our elements, and that we select those classes by placing a dot before the name, as in .centered

  • It turns out that we can move all our style code into a special file called a CSS file. We can create a file called style.css and paste our classes there:

    .centered
    {
        text-align: center;
    }
    
    .large
    {
        font-size: large;
    }
    
    .medium
    {
        font-size: medium;
    }
    
    .small
    {
        font-size: small;
    }
    

    Notice that this is verbatim what appeared in our HTML file.

  • We then can tell the browser where to locate the CSS for this HTML file:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates external stylesheets -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet">
            <title>css</title>
        </head>
        <body class="centered">
            <header class="large">
                John Harvard
            </header>
            <main class="medium">
                Welcome to my home page!
            </main>
            <footer class="small">
                Copyright &#169; John Harvard
            </footer>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that style.css is linked to this HTML file as a stylesheet, telling the browser where to locate the styles we created.

Frameworks

  • Similar to third-party libraries we can leverage in Python, there are third-party libraries called frameworks that we can utilize with our HTML files.
  • Bootstrap is one of these frameworks that we can use to beautify our HTML and easily perfect design elements such that our pages are more readable.
  • Bootstrap can be utilized by adding the following link tag in the head of your html file:

    <head>
        <link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/bootstrap@5.2.2/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" integrity="sha384-Zenh87qX5JnK2Jl0vWa8Ck2rdkQ2Bzep5IDxbcnCeuOxjzrPF/et3URy9Bv1WTRi" crossorigin="anonymous">
        <title>favorites</title>
    </head>
    
  • You can learn more about this in the Bootstrap Documentation.

JavaScript

  • JavaScript is another programming language that allows for interactivity within web pages.
  • JavaScript supports conditionals:

    if (x < y)
    {
    
    }
    else
    {
    
    }
    
  • Variables are also supported:

    let counter = 0;
    
  • You can also increment:

    counter++
    
  • Loops are very similar to what you have seen before in C:

    for (let i = 0; i < 3; i++)
    {
    
    }
    
  • JavaScript allows you to dynamically read and modify the html document loaded into memory such that the user need not reload to see changes.
  • Consider the following HTML:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <!-- Demonstrates programmatic changes to style -->
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>background</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <button id="red">R</button>
            <button id="green">G</button>
            <button id="blue">B</button>
            <script>
    
                let body = document.querySelector('body');
                document.querySelector('#red').addEventListener('click', function() {
                    body.style.backgroundColor = 'red';
                });
                document.querySelector('#green').addEventListener('click', function() {
                    body.style.backgroundColor = 'green';
                });
                document.querySelector('#blue').addEventListener('click', function() {
                    body.style.backgroundColor = 'blue';
                });
    
            </script>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that JavaScript listens for when a specific button is clicked. Upon such a click, certain style attributes on the page are changed. body is defined as the body of the page. Then, an event listener waits for the clicking of one of the buttons. Then, the body.style.backgroundColor is changed.

  • Similarly, consider the following:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <script>
    
                // Toggles visibility of greeting
                function blink()
                {
                    let body = document.querySelector('body');
                    if (body.style.visibility == 'hidden')
                    {
                        body.style.visibility = 'visible';
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        body.style.visibility = 'hidden';
                    }
                }
    
                // Blink every 500ms
                window.setInterval(blink, 500);
    
            </script>
            <title>blink</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            hello, world
        </body>
    </html>
    

    This example blinks a text at a set interval. Notice that window.setInterval takes in two arguments: 1) A function to be called and 2) a wait period (in milliseconds) between function calls.

  • Consider the following:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <html lang="en">
    
        <head>
            <title>autocomplete</title>
        </head>
    
        <body>
    
            <input autocomplete="off" autofocus placeholder="Query" type="text">
    
            <ul></ul>
    
            <script src="large.js"></script>
            <script>
    
                let input = document.querySelector('input');
                input.addEventListener('keyup', function(event) {
                    let html = '';
                    if (input.value) {
                        for (word of WORDS) {
                            if (word.startsWith(input.value)) {
                                html += `<li>${word}</li>`;
                            }
                        }
                    }
                    document.querySelector('ul').innerHTML = html;
                });
    
            </script>
    
        </body>
    </html>
    

    This is a JavaScript implementation of autocomplete.

  • Interestingly, we can also geolocate using JavaScript:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    
    <html lang="en">
        <head>
            <title>geolocation</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <script>
    
                navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(function(position) {
                    document.write(position.coords.latitude + ", " + position.coords.longitude);
                });
    
            </script>
        </body>
    </html>
    

    Notice that navigator.geolocation is used to getCurrentPosition. This will not work if your computer or browser does not allow for location tracking.

  • The capabilities of JavaScript are many and can be found in the JavaScript Documentation.

Summing Up

In this lesson, you learned how to create your own HTML files, style them, leverage third-party frameworks, and utilize JavaScript. Specifically, we discussed…

  • TCP/IP
  • DNS
  • HTML
  • CSS
  • Frameworks
  • JavaScript

See you next time!