Book Image

Professional JavaScript

By : Hugo Di Francesco, Siyuan Gao, Vinicius Isola, Philip Kirkbride
Book Image

Professional JavaScript

By: Hugo Di Francesco, Siyuan Gao, Vinicius Isola, Philip Kirkbride

Overview of this book

In depth knowledge of JavaScript makes it easier to learn a variety of other frameworks, including React, Angular, and related tools and libraries. This book is designed to help you cover the core JavaScript concepts you need to build modern applications. You'll start by learning how to represent an HTML document in the Document Object Model (DOM). Then, you'll combine your knowledge of the DOM and Node.js to create a web scraper for practical situations. As you read through further lessons, you'll create a Node.js-based RESTful API using the Express library for Node.js. You'll also understand how modular designs can be used for better reusability and collaboration with multiple developers on a single project. Later lessons will guide you through building unit tests, which ensure that the core functionality of your program is not affected over time. The book will also demonstrate how constructors, async/await, and events can load your applications quickly and efficiently. Finally, you'll gain useful insights into functional programming concepts such as immutability, pure functions, and higher-order functions. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills you need to tackle any real-world JavaScript development problem using a modern JavaScript approach, both for the client and server sides.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Maps and Sets

Maps and Sets are very underrated types in JavaScript, but they can be very powerful in some applications. Maps work just like a basic hashmap in JavaScript, and are useful when you need to keep track of a list of key-value pairs. Sets are used when you need to keep a list of unique values. Most developers often use objects for everything while forgetting that, in some cases, using Maps and Sets is way more efficient. In the following section, we will go over Maps and Sets and how to use them.

There are many cases where we must keep track of a list of unique key-value pairs in our application. When programming with other languages, we often need to implement a class called Hashmap. In JavaScript, there are two types that can accomplish this: one is Map and the other is Object. Because they seem to do the same thing, many JavaScript developers tend to use Object for everything while ignoring that using Map is sometimes way more effective for their use case.

Exercise...