JavaScript 2022

Term 3 Wednesday

May - July 2022

This site will be updated live during the sessions

Week 5 2 GetElementsByTagName Example

JavaScript Week 5 Example 2 getElementsByTagName() Example

Cheese of the UK

Banbury

Once one of Banbury's most prestigious exports, and nationally famous, its production went into decline by the 18th-century, and eventually ceased. The cheese is best known today through an insult in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor (1597).

Cheddar

The UK's most famous cheese, and one of the most popular. Aging is the only difference between mild and sharp Cheddars. The longer cheese is aged naturally, the sharper and more pronounced the Cheddar flavor becomes. Mild Cheddar cheese is generally aged for 2 to 3 months, whereas an extra sharp might be aged for as long as a year.

Stilton

Stilton is produced in two varieties: Blue, which has had Penicillium roqueforti added to generate a characteristic smell and taste, and White, which has not. Stilton is only made in three Counties in England: Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire, and is is a protected cheese. Stilton is protected by a Certification Trade Mark and EU Protected Designation of Origin (PDO).

Stinking Bishop

Perhaps the UK's most notorious cheese, known for its distinctive odour. The colour of Stinking Bishop ranges from white/yellow to beige, with an orange to grey rind. It is moulded into wheels 2 kilograms (4.4 lb) in weight, 20 centimetres (7.9 in) in diameter, and 4 centimetres (1.6 in) deep. Only about 20 tonnes are produced each year. The distinctive odour comes from the process with which the cheese is washed during its ripening; it is immersed in perry made from the local Stinking Bishop pear (from which the cheese gets its name) every four weeks while it matures. To increase the moisture content and to encourage bacterial activity, salt is not added until the cheese is removed from its mould.

		
001window.onload = function(){	
		
002	const H2Elements = document.getElementsByTagName('h2');
		
003	console.log(H2Elements[0].innerHTML);
		
004	for(let i = 0; i<H2Elements.length; i++)
		
005	{
		
006		console.log(H2Elements[i].innerHTML);
		
007	}
		
008}