Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
calendar_monthly header still showing
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@broberg said in calendar_monthly header still showing:
when handling false/true I don’t think you are supposed to use ’ ’ around it.
Should be handled like numbers.Well, I’m an idiot! Thanks bro. I’ll change that right now.
That did the trick. :clap_tone2:
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Yes true and false in that case are used as a boolean so you don’t use ’ ’ or " " :)
Very often, in programming, you will need a data type that can only have one of two values, like YES / NO ON / OFF TRUE / FALSE For this, JavaScript has a Boolean data type. It can only take the values true or false.
I had to learn that too :)
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@Mykle1 In case you want to know why:
'false'
is a string and astring
always represents theboolean
true
, so'test'
,'true'
and'false'
all become true it doesn’t matter what the content of the string is. -
@strawberry-3.141 said in calendar_monthly header still showing:
@Mykle1 In case you want to know why:
‘false’ is a string and a string always represents the boolean true, so ‘test’, ‘true’ and ‘false’ all become true it doesn’t matter what the content of the string is.So, the single quotes
'
are what make it a string? Meaning, whatever is inside single quotes is considered a string?
And if that is so, then what is the wordtrue
orfalse
without the quotes called? A value? A parameter?Obviously, I’m still confused, but thank you for the lesson.
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@Mykle1 everything in single or double quotes is a string, string is a type for text.
There are multiple types:
- object
{}
- array
[]
- number
2
,-17
and3.14
- string
"I am a string"
and'me too'
- boolean
true
orfalse
- object
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@strawberry-3.141 said in calendar_monthly header still showing:
everything in single or double quotes is a string, string is a type for text.
Ok, thank you. I do appreciate the information. Some of it is starting to make sense. I’ve learned quite a bit in the short time that I’ve been here.