Books
Stoyan Stefanov

Object-Oriented JavaScript

In DetailOnce listed in the “nice to have” sections of job postings, these days the knowledge of JavaScript is a deciding factor when it comes to hiring web developers. And rightly so. Where in the past we used to have the occasional few lines of JavaScript embedded in a web page, now we have advanced libraries and extensible architectures, powering the “fat-client”, AJAX-type rich internet applications.
JavaScript is the language of the browser, but it's also heavily employed in many other environments: server-side programming, desktop applications, application extensions and widgets. It's a pretty good deal: you learn one language and then code all kinds of different applications. While this book has one chapter specifically dedicated to the web browser environment including DOM, events, and AJAX tutorials, the rest is applicable to all the other environments too.
This book treats JavaScript as a serious object-oriented language, showing you how to build robust, maintainable, and powerful libraries and applications. Along the way, we cover many of the recent innovations such as AJAX, JSON, and interesting design and coding patterns. After reading this book, you'll be prepared to ace your JavaScript job interview and even impress with some bits that the interviewer maybe didn't know. You should read this book if you want to be able to take your JavaScript skills to a new level of sophistication.
Create scalable and reusable high-quality JavaScript applications and libraries using the concepts of object-oriented programming
Who this book is forThe book requires no prior knowledge of JavaScript and works from the ground up to give you a thorough grounding in this powerful language. If you do already know some JavaScript, you will find plenty of eye-openers as you discover just what the language can do.
This book takes a do-it-yourself approach when it comes to writing code, because the best way to really learn a programming language is by writing code. You are encouraged to type code into Firebug's console, see how it works and then tweak it and play around with it. There are practice questions at the end of each chapter to help review what you have learned.
328 printed pages
Publication year
2008
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Quotes

  • Kirill Sandryhailohas quoted3 years ago
    Tip

    Tips and tricks
  • DKhas quoted3 years ago
    Functions allow you group together some code, give this code a name, and reuse it later, addressing it by name.
  • DKhas quoted3 years ago
    Single line comments—start with // and end at the end of the line
    Multi-line comments—start with /* and end with */ on the same line or any subsequent line. Note that any code in between the comment start and the comment end will be ignored.

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