var i;
for(i=10; i>=0; i= i-1){
var s;
for(s=0; s<i; s = s+1){
document.write("*");
}
//i want this to print a new line
/document.write(?);
}
I am printing a pyramid of stars, I can't get the new line to print.
var i;
for(i=10; i>=0; i= i-1){
var s;
for(s=0; s<i; s = s+1){
document.write("*");
}
//i want this to print a new line
/document.write(?);
}
I am printing a pyramid of stars, I can't get the new line to print.
Use the \n
for a newline character.
document.write("\n");
You can also have more than one:
document.write("\n\n\n"); // 3 new lines! My oh my!
However, if this is rendering to HTML, you will want to use the HTML tag for a newline:
document.write("<br>");
The string Hello\n\nTest
in your source will look like this:
Hello!
Test
The string Hello<br><br>Test
will look like this in HTML source:
Hello<br><br>Test
The HTML one will render as line breaks for the person viewing the page, the \n
just drops the text to the next line in the source (if it's on an HTML page).
document.write
, it's an HTML page, not an XHTML page. <br>
is the correct linebreak for an HTML page. <br />
is XHTML.
– T.J. Crowder
Apr 22 '11 at 17:38
how about:
document.write ("<br>");
(assuming you are in an html page, since a line feed alone will only show as a space)
Use a <br>
tag to create a line break in the document
document.write("<br>");
Here's a sample fiddle
document.write
in a plain text document? (E.g., how do you put in the script
tag?) Good point about the pre
, though, could easily be a pre
section.
– T.J. Crowder
Apr 22 '11 at 17:40
text/plain
doc, but I think I was clear about the pre
being a good point.)
– T.J. Crowder
Apr 22 '11 at 17:45
Use "\n"
:
document.write("\n");
Note, it has to be surrounded in double quotes for it to be interpreted as a newline. No it doesn't.
pre
element. Good point. If outputting ASCII art to a pre
section, \n
may well be the right thing... (Edit: LOL, overlapping comments.)
– T.J. Crowder
Apr 22 '11 at 17:42
pre
was perfectly clear. (Closed the tag for you: jsfiddle.net/wT3Ab/1) Best,
– T.J. Crowder
Apr 22 '11 at 18:09
document.writeln()
is what you are looking for or document.write('\n' + 'words')
if you are looking for more granularity in when the new line is used
In html page:
document.write("<br>");
but if you are in JavaScript file, then this will work as new line:
document.write("\n");
To create a new line, symbol is '\n'
var i;
for(i=10; i>=0; i= i-1){
var s;
for(s=0; s<i; s = s+1){
document.write("*");
}
//i want this to print a new line
document.write('\n');
}
If you are outputting to the page, you'll want to use "<br/>"
instead of '/n'
;
For a string I just write "\n"
to give me a new line. For example, typing console.log("First Name: Rex" + "\n" + "Last Name: Blythe");
Will type:
First Name: Rex
Last Name: Blythe
Alternatively, write to an element with the CSS white-space: pre
and use \n
for newline character.
your solution is
var i;
for(i=10; i>=0; i= i-1){
var s;
for(s=0; s<i; s = s+1){
document.write("*");
}
//printing new line
document.write("<br>");
}
If you are using a JavaScript file (.js) then use document.write("\n");
. If you are in a html file (.html or . htm) then use document.write("<br/>");
.
document.write("\n");
won't work if you're executing it (document.write();
) multiple times.
I'll suggest you should go for:
document.write("<br>");
P.S I know people have stated this answer above but didn't find the difference anywhere so :)
For adding a new line use
document.write("<br>")
For adding space use
document.write(" ")
or
document.write("\n")
\n --> newline character is not working for inserting a new line.
str="Hello!!";
document.write(str);
document.write("\n");
document.write(str);
But if we use below code then it works fine and it gives new line.
document.write(str);
document.write("<br>");
document.write(str);
Note:: I tried in Visual Studio Code.