It works, you just need to make sure that the javascript function is defined when the element is rendered, f.ex.
<script>
function updateSlider(slideAmount) {
var sliderDiv = document.getElementById("sliderAmount");
sliderDiv.innerHTML = slideAmount;
}
</script>
<input id="slide" type="range" min="1" max="100" step="1" value="10" onchange="updateSlider(this.value)">
<div id="sliderAmount"></div>?
See this demo: http://jsfiddle.net/Mmgxg/
A better way would be to remove the inline onchange
attribute:
<input id="slide" type="range" min="1" max="100" step="1" value="10">
<div id="sliderAmount"></div>
And then add the listener in your javascript:
var slide = document.getElementById('slide'),
sliderDiv = document.getElementById("sliderAmount");
slide.onchange = function() {
sliderDiv.innerHTML = this.value;
}?
?http://jsfiddle.net/PPBUJ/
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