20 Comments

https://codepen.io/romola/pen/NWpGdPZ?editors=1000

Now I see comments about week of sports season vs. week of year. I used week of year.

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No worries! Very few people got that right. It was a tough question.

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May 8, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

Time Challenge

https://codepen.io/kajal-28/pen/KKWwLGp

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 Nicely done! The HTML looks great -- see my comments to others below regarding the week 15 thing. Your code is correct for the 15th week of the year, but not necessarily for the 15th week of a sports season. Thanks for sharing!

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May 9, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

Okay, Thank you.

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Apr 30, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

https://codepen.io/trenadee/pen/JjEQbxP

I wasn't sure if I needed something besides the 4PM for the second example. "Saturdays" is referring to multiple Saturdays. Is there a way to input all Saturdays? Also for the final example I assumed "tomorrow" was literally tomorrow's date (even though I am completing this on a different day), so I put in May 1st!

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 Once again, good stuff! See below about comments regarding "week 15". Thanks again for sharing!

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Apr 22, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

https://codepen.io/athelas85/pen/poRQqrG

As others, I assumed the 15 week is in year calendar, in another answer you said that in football time that would be a week in fall and since we are talking about April, i think is referring to the year one which is in April.

I have a question about the string time PT7H30M in the example. What’s the P stand for?

Thanks!!! This challenge is great BTW.

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 You did great once again! As to the P, I am not sure. The spec is here: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/common-microsyntaxes.html#valid-duration-string It's possible that the P is a flag to the programming that there's a date or time that's in a certain format following the P.

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Apr 17, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer
Apr 17, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

This one was a little tricky. I'm not sure if Week 15 was of the calendar year or the season. Also, how does one datetime for "Saturdays" or "Tomorrow"? Do they have a day+1?

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 These look good! If you meant week 15 of the calendar year, you're all set. If you meant week 15 of the football season (which is the week of Dec 20-ish), then this would be wrong -- so far as I know, there's no way to do this, other than look up what calendar week that is. Also, so far as I know, no relative dates or times, so you've got it all just fine. Thanks for sharing!

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Apr 15, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer
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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 These look great EXCEPT I think you might rethink the football/week 15 one? If you are football-literate, football happens late in the year, but week 15 in the calendar happens earlier (around now, I guess). I gave Jade credit for that because she said she interpreted it as the 15th week of the year. If you do the same, then yay, you did it! 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵

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Apr 15, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

https://codepen.io/kelsey-van-ert/pen/bGgKovY?editors=1000 I have the same question as Jade Chaffin.

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 Let's work from the bottom up -- last answer looks good! You only marked up the time, and I think that works (or you could mark up the time and tomorrow's date). Your week formatting was correct, but that indicates the 15th week of the year, which probably isn't the 15th week of football season. The baseball one looks great, and the tax one is good except the formatting of the date is wrong -- should be 2021-04-15. Great job! 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵

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Apr 16, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

Thank you!

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Apr 15, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

https://codepen.io/jarchaff/pen/wvgXdOy?editors=1000

This was one was a bit confusing!

For the second example, I could not find any formatting specifically for a day of the week that recurs and does not have a specific date, so I decided not to use <time> around 'Saturday'. For the third example, I assumed 'week 15' was referring the the 15th week of the year, and for the last example, I assumed 'tomorrow' to literally mean April 16th, 2021.

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 Based on your explanations, you got them all right! Woo woo! 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵

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🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎵🎵🎵 I like your answers! Agree with the tax time answer (that one was easy). Second answer on baseball I also like. Correct that there's no way to mark up "Saturdays." I also like your 3rd answer. Week 15 in the football calendar is in the fall/winter, and not the 15th week of the calendar year, so I think that's right. Last answer looks good too -- you have tomorrow's date. Great job!

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