Book Image

Object-Oriented JavaScript - Third Edition

By : Ved Antani, Stoyan STEFANOV
5 (1)
Book Image

Object-Oriented JavaScript - Third Edition

5 (1)
By: Ved Antani, Stoyan STEFANOV

Overview of this book

JavaScript is an object-oriented programming language that is used for website development. Web pages developed today currently follow a paradigm that has three clearly distinguishable parts: content (HTML), presentation (CSS), and behavior (JavaScript). JavaScript is one important pillar in this paradigm, and is responsible for the running of the web pages. This book will take your JavaScript skills to a new level of sophistication and get you prepared for your journey through professional web development. Updated for ES6, this book covers everything you will need to unleash the power of object-oriented programming in JavaScript while building professional web applications. The book begins with the basics of object-oriented programming in JavaScript and then gradually progresses to cover functions, objects, and prototypes, and how these concepts can be used to make your programs cleaner, more maintainable, faster, and compatible with other programs/libraries. By the end of the book, you will have learned how to incorporate object-oriented programming in your web development workflow to build professional JavaScript applications.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Object-Oriented JavaScript - Third Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Built-in Functions
Regular Expressions

Generators


Closely linked with iterators and iterables, generators are one of the most talked about features of ES6. Generator functions return a generator object; this term sounds confusing at first. When you write a function, you also instinctively understand its behavior-the function starts execution, line-by-line, and finishes execution when the last line is executed. Once the function is linearly executed this way, the rest of the code that follows the function is executed.

In languages where multithreading is supported, such flow of execution can be interrupted and partially finished tasks can be shared between different threads, processes, and channels. JavaScript is single-threaded, and you don't need to deal with challenges around multithreading at the moment.

However, generator functions can be paused and resumed later. The important idea here is that the generator function chooses to pause itself, it cannot be paused by any external code. During execution, the function uses the...