Learn HTML by Building a Cat Photo App - Step 56

Tell us what’s happening:
Describe your issue in detail here.

There’s another way to associate an input element’s text with the element itself. You can nest the text within a label element and add a for attribute with the same value as the input element’s id attribute.

Associate the text Loving with the checkbox by nesting only the text Loving in a label element and giving it an appropriate for attribute.

How do I add in the for=“loving” attribute in the label element without a second input? Not sure where to put the for=“loving” attribute.

Your code so far

<html>
  <body>
    <main>
      <h1>CatPhotoApp</h1>
      <section>
        <h2>Cat Photos</h2>
        <!-- TODO: Add link to cat photos -->
        <p>See more <a target="_blank" href="https://freecatphotoapp.com">cat photos</a> in our gallery.</p>
        <a href="https://freecatphotoapp.com"><img src="https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/relaxing-cat.jpg" alt="A cute orange cat lying on its back."></a>
      </section>
      <section>
        <h2>Cat Lists</h2>
        <h3>Things cats love:</h3>
        <ul>
          <li>cat nip</li>
          <li>laser pointers</li>
          <li>lasagna</li>
        </ul>
        <figure>
          <img src="https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/lasagna.jpg" alt="A slice of lasagna on a plate.">
          <figcaption>Cats <em>love</em> lasagna.</figcaption>  
        </figure>
        <h3>Top 3 things cats hate:</h3>
        <ol>
          <li>flea treatment</li>
          <li>thunder</li>
          <li>other cats</li>
        </ol>
        <figure>
          <img src="https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/cats.jpg" alt="Five cats looking around a field.">
          <figcaption>Cats <strong>hate</strong> other cats.</figcaption>  
        </figure>
      </section>
      <section>
        <h2>Cat Form</h2>
        <form action="https://freecatphotoapp.com/submit-cat-photo">
          <fieldset>
            <legend>Is your cat an indoor or outdoor cat?</legend>
            <label><input id="indoor" type="radio" name="indoor-outdoor" value="indoor"> Indoor</label>
            <label><input id="outdoor" type="radio" name="indoor-outdoor" value="outdoor"> Outdoor</label>
          </fieldset>
          <fieldset>
            <legend>What's your cat's personality?</legend>

<!-- User Editable Region -->

        <input id="loving" type="checkbox">
         for="loving"<label>Loving</label>

<!-- User Editable Region -->

          </fieldset>
          <input type="text" name="catphotourl" placeholder="cat photo URL" required>
          <button type="submit">Submit</button>
        </form>
      </section>
    </main>
  </body>
</html>

Your browser information:

User Agent is: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/110.0.0.0 Safari/537.36

Challenge: Learn HTML by Building a Cat Photo App - Step 56

Link to the challenge:

HTML attributes (e.g. for=“loving”) always go inside the opening tag of the corresponding element.

EXAMPLE:

<p attribute="value">this is a paragraph</p>

I put the attribute inside of the input element. Didn’t work.

I put the attribute inside of the label element. Didn’t work.

The attribute should be inside the opening label tag. Do that (using the syntax in the example above) and then show me the code, if it’s not passing.

    <label for="Loving"</label>

That’s not the syntax in the example. You haven’t closed off the opening tag and you’re missing the text ‘Loving’ which should be between the opening and closing tags. Oh, and the for attribute should be ‘loving’ not ‘Loving’.

    <label> for="loving" Loving</label>

Still isn’t working.

Closer… but the for attribute should be inside the opening label tag.

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