Corrected Version
var inputEl = document.getElementById("inputID");
unction myFunction() {
if (inputEl.value === 'Hi') {
alert("Hello");
} else {
alert("Goodbye");
}
}
Which is pretty much what you had, except for few fixes and best practices:
- the variable name change (
inputEl
instead of 1
- see Valid Identifiers below)
- the strings in the
alert
statements (maybe they were variables, but we couldn't assert it from your snippet);
- the strict equality comparison;
- the missing semi-colons;
Why It Didn't Work
It doesn't work because of the 1
variable name being invalid.
Then if it still doesn't work after that, then your HTML is wrong and the ID of your element isn't really inputID
,
Valid Identifiers
if you try this in Chrome's console (or another JS environment) to replicate your variable declaration:
var 1 = 'test';
You'll get a nice output similar to:
SyntaxError: Unexpected number
So, just changing your variable name should be enough, if there aren't any other issues.
FYI, According to the Mozilla Developer Network, valid identifiers in JavaScript are:
A JavaScript identifier must start with a letter, underscore (_), or
dollar sign ($); subsequent characters can also be digits (0-9).
Because JavaScript is case sensitive, letters include the characters
"A" through "Z" (uppercase) and the characters "a" through "z"
(lowercase).
Starting with JavaScript 1.5, you can use ISO 8859-1 or Unicode
letters such as å and ü in identifiers. You can also use the \uXXXX
Unicode escape sequences as characters in identifiers.
For a less digestable version, the full spec for identifiers is in the 5.1 Edition of the ECMA-262 standard in section 7.6