I just taught myself how to code with tutorials from the internet. I'm currently trying to learn Javascript and I don't really undesrtand the purpose of "return". I made a "rock, paper, scissors" game at the end of my lesson, using the return function. The game looks like this:
var userChoice = prompt("Do you choose rock, paper or scissors?");
var computerChoice = Math.random();
if (computerChoice < 0.34) {
computerChoice = "rock";
} else if(computerChoice <= 0.67) {
computerChoice = "paper";
} else {
computerChoice = "scissors";
} console.log("Computer: " + computerChoice);
var compare = function(choice1, choice2){
if(choice1 === choice2){
return "The result is a tie!";
}
else if(choice1 === "rock"){
if(choice2 === "scissors"){
return "rock wins";
}
else{
return "paper wins";
}
}
else if(choice1 === "paper"){
if(choice2 === "rock"){
return "paper wins";
}
else{
return "scissors wins";
}
}
else if(choice1 === "scissors"){
if(choice2 === "paper"){
return "scissors wins";
}
else{
return "rock wins";
}
}
};
compare(userChoice, computerChoice);
What exactly would be the difference if I used console.log("....")
instead of "return"
here?