* feat: use legacy flag chore: reorder challenges fix: linter revert: server change feat: unblock new editor fix: proper order fix: 0-based order fix: broke the order feat: move tribute certification to its own block feat: split the old projects block into 4 fix: put all blocks in order chore: add intro text refactor: use block, not blockName in query fix: project progress indicator * fix: reorder new challenges/certs * fix: reorder legacy challenges * fix: reintroduce legacy certs * feat: add showNewCurriculum flag to env * chore: forgot sample.env * feat: use feature flag for display * fix: rename meta + dirs to match new blocks * fix: add new blocks to help-category-map * fix: update completion-modal for new GQL schema * test: duplicate title/id errors -> warnings * fix: update completion-modal to new GQL schema Mk2 * chore: re-order metas (again) * fix: revert super-block-intro changes The intro needs to show both legacy and new content. We need to decide which pages are created, rather than than what a page shows when rendered. * feat: move upcoming curriculum into own superblock * fix: handle one certification with two superBlocks * fix: remove duplicated intros * fix: remove duplicate projects from /settings * fix: drop 'two' from Responsive Web Design Two * chore: rename slug suffix from two to v2 * feat: control display of new curriculum * feat: control project paths shown on /settings * fix: use new project order for /settings This does mean that /settings will change before the release, but I don't think it's serious. All the projects are there, just not in the legacy order. * fix: claim/show cert button * chore: remove isLegacy Since we have legacy superblocks, we don't currently need individual blocks to be legacy * test: fix utils.test * fix: verifyCanClaim needs certification If Shaun removes the cert claim cards, maybe we can remove this entirely * fix: add hasEditableBoundaries flags where needed * chore: remove isUpcomingChange * chore: v2 -> 22 Co-authored-by: Oliver Eyton-Williams <ojeytonwilliams@gmail.com>
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2.1 KiB
id, title, challengeType, dashedName
id | title | challengeType | dashedName |
---|---|---|---|
60f80e0081e0f2052ae5b505 | Step 16 | 0 | step-16 |
--description--
Specifying the type
attribute of a form element is important for the browser to know what kind of data it should expect. If the type
is not specified, the browser will default to text
.
Give the first two input
elements a type
attribute of text
, the third a type
attribute of email
, and the fourth a type
attribute of password
.
The email
type only allows emails with a @
and a .
in the domain.
The password
type obscures the input, and warns if the site does not use HTTPS.
--hints--
You should give the first input
element a type
attribute of text
.
assert.equal(document.querySelector('input')?.type, 'text');
You should give the second input
element a type
attribute of text
.
assert.equal(document.querySelectorAll('input')?.[1]?.type, 'text');
You should give the third input
element a type
attribute of email
.
assert.equal(document.querySelectorAll('input')?.[2]?.type, 'email');
You should give the fourth input
element a type
attribute of password
.
assert.equal(document.querySelectorAll('input')?.[3]?.type, 'password');
--seed--
--seed-contents--
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>freeCodeCamp Registration Form Project</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="styles.css" />
</head>
<body>
<h1>Registration Form</h1>
<p>Please fill out this form with the required information</p>
<form action='https://fcc-registration-form.com'>
--fcc-editable-region--
<fieldset>
<label>Enter Your First Name: <input /></label>
<label>Enter Your Last Name: <input /></label>
<label>Enter Your Email: <input /></label>
<label>Create a New Password: <input /></label>
</fieldset>
--fcc-editable-region--
<fieldset></fieldset>
<fieldset></fieldset>
</form>
</body>
</html>
body {
width: 100%;
height: 100vh;
margin: 0;
background-color: #1b1b32;
color: #f5f6f7;
}
label {
display: block;
margin: 0.5rem 0;
}