Book Image

CoffeeScript Application Development

By : Ian Greenleaf Young
Book Image

CoffeeScript Application Development

By: Ian Greenleaf Young

Overview of this book

JavaScript is becoming one of the key languages in web development. It is now more important than ever across a growing list of platforms. CoffeeScript puts the fun back into JavaScript programming with elegant syntax and powerful features. CoffeeScript Application Development will give you an in-depth look at the CoffeeScript language, all while building a working web application. Along the way, you'll see all the great features CoffeeScript has to offer, and learn how to use them to deal with real problems like sprawling codebases, incomplete data, and asynchronous web requests. Through the course of this book you will learn the CoffeeScript syntax and see it demonstrated with simple examples. As you go, you'll put your new skills into practice by building a web application, piece by piece. You'll start with standard language features such as loops, functions, and string manipulation. Then, we'll delve into advanced features like classes and inheritance. Learn advanced idioms to deal with common occurrences like external web requests, and hone your technique for development tasks like debugging and refactoring. CoffeeScript Application Development will teach you not only how to write CoffeeScript, but also how to build solid applications that run smoothly and are a pleasure to maintain.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
CoffeeScript Application Development
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Constructors


When initializing a new object, we'll often find that we want to do some setup on the new object. This may include setting default values for properties, setting values for properties that are always required, or doing some additional computation before saving the results in the object's state.

So far, we've set properties on our objects after initializing them, like this:

plane = new Airplane()
plane.color = "white"

While it's nice to set properties this way some of the time, it becomes tiresome to do it all the time. It tends to move initialization logic out of the class and into the calling context, which leads to repetitive code. And if our caller makes a new object but forgets the subsequent initialization steps, we could end up in a weird half-initialized state, where things we expect to be present are not present.

The best way to deal with this is to define a constructor method. In CoffeeScript, this method is declared inside the class body, just like any other. It is identified...