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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May 8, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer

Time Challenge

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

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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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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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Apr 17, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer
Apr 15, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer
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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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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deletedApr 15, 2021Liked by Jen Kramer
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