Book Image

Javascript Unlocked

Book Image

Javascript Unlocked

Overview of this book

JavaScript stands bestride the world like a colossus. Having conquered web development, it now advances into new areas such as server scripting, desktop and mobile development, game scripting, and more. One of the most essential languages for any modern developer, the fully-engaged JavaScript programmer need to know the tricks, non-documented features, quirks, and best practices of this powerful, adaptive language. This all-practical guide is stuffed with code recipes and keys to help you unlock the full potential of JavaScript. Start by diving right into the core of JavaScript, with power user techniques for getting better maintainability and performance from the basic building blocks of your code. Get to grips with modular programming to bring real power to the browser, master client-side JavaScript scripting without jQuery or other frameworks, and discover the full potential of asynchronous coding. Do great things with HTML5 APIs, including building your first web component, tackle the essential requirements of writing large-scale applications, and optimize JavaScript’s performance behind the browser. Wrap up with in-depth advice and best practice for debugging and keeping your JavaScript maintainable for scaling, long-term projects. With every task demonstrated in both classic ES5 JavaScript and next generation ES6-7 versions of the language, Whether read cover-to-cover or dipped into for specific keys and recipes, JavaScript Unlocked is your essential guide for pushing JavaScript to its limits.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
JavaScript Unlocked
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Transpiling CommonJS for in-browser use


While HTTP/2 and Packaging on the Web are still on their way, we need fast modular applications. As it was previously mentioned, we can divide the application code into CommonJS modules and transpile them for in-browser use. The most popular CommonJS transpiler is surely Browserify (http://browserify.org). The initial mission of this tool was to make Node.js modules reusable. They quite succeeded in this. It may feel like magic, but you can really use EventEmitter and some other Node.js core modules on the client. However, with the main focus on Node.js compatibility, the tool provides too few options for CommonJS compilation. For example, if you want dependency configuration, you have to use a plugin. In a real-world project, you will likely end up with multiple plugins, where each has a specific configuration syntax. So the setup in general gets over-complicated. Rather, we'll examine here another tool called CommonJS Compiler (https://github.com...