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Learn Understanding Events and Event Listeners | Interactivity and Best Practices
DOM Manipulation with JavaScript

bookUnderstanding Events and Event Listeners

When you want your web page to respond to what users doβ€”like clicking a button, typing in a field, or moving the mouseβ€”you use events. An event is any action that happens in the browser, such as a mouse click, a key press, or a page loading. JavaScript allows you to react to these actions using event listeners.

There are many types of events you might want to handle:

  • Click events: when a user clicks on an element;
  • Input events: when a user types or changes a value in an input field;
  • Mouse events: like moving the mouse over an element (mouseover), or pressing a mouse button (mousedown);
  • Keyboard events: pressing or releasing keys (keydown, keyup);
  • Form events: submitting a form (submit);
  • And many more, depending on what you want to track.

To make your code respond to these events, you use the addEventListener method. This method lets you attach a function (called a handler) that runs whenever the specified event occurs on an element. The basic pattern looks like this:

element.addEventListener('eventType', handlerFunction);

Here, eventType is a string like "click" or "input", and handlerFunction is the function you want to run when the event happens. This approach separates your JavaScript from your HTML and is the recommended way to handle events.

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Which of the following statements about JavaScript events and event listeners are true? Select all that apply.

Select the correct answer

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SectionΒ 3. ChapterΒ 1

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bookUnderstanding Events and Event Listeners

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When you want your web page to respond to what users doβ€”like clicking a button, typing in a field, or moving the mouseβ€”you use events. An event is any action that happens in the browser, such as a mouse click, a key press, or a page loading. JavaScript allows you to react to these actions using event listeners.

There are many types of events you might want to handle:

  • Click events: when a user clicks on an element;
  • Input events: when a user types or changes a value in an input field;
  • Mouse events: like moving the mouse over an element (mouseover), or pressing a mouse button (mousedown);
  • Keyboard events: pressing or releasing keys (keydown, keyup);
  • Form events: submitting a form (submit);
  • And many more, depending on what you want to track.

To make your code respond to these events, you use the addEventListener method. This method lets you attach a function (called a handler) that runs whenever the specified event occurs on an element. The basic pattern looks like this:

element.addEventListener('eventType', handlerFunction);

Here, eventType is a string like "click" or "input", and handlerFunction is the function you want to run when the event happens. This approach separates your JavaScript from your HTML and is the recommended way to handle events.

index.html

index.html

style.css

style.css

script.js

script.js

copy
question mark

Which of the following statements about JavaScript events and event listeners are true? Select all that apply.

Select the correct answer

Everything was clear?

How can we improve it?

Thanks for your feedback!

SectionΒ 3. ChapterΒ 1
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