Book Image

Modern JavaScript Web Development Cookbook

By : Federico Kereki
Book Image

Modern JavaScript Web Development Cookbook

By: Federico Kereki

Overview of this book

JavaScript has evolved into a language that you can use on any platform. Modern JavaScript Web Development Cookbook is a perfect blend of solutions for traditional JavaScript development and modern areas that developers have lately been exploring with JavaScript. This comprehensive guide teaches you how to work with JavaScript on servers, browsers, mobile phones and desktops. You will start by exploring the new features of ES8. You will then move on to learning the use of ES8 on servers (with Node.js), with the objective of producing services and microservices and dealing with authentication and CORS. Once you get accustomed to ES8, you will learn to apply it to browsers using frameworks, such as React and Redux, which interact through Ajax with services. You will then understand the use of a modern framework to develop the UI. In addition to this, development for mobile devices with React Native will walk you through the benefits of creating native apps, both for Android and iOS. Finally, you’ll be able to apply your new-found knowledge of server-side and client-side tools to develop applications with Electron.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Working with objects and classes

If you want to start a lively discussion, ask a group of web developers: is JavaScript an object oriented language, or merely an object based one?, and retreat quickly! This discussion, while possibly arcane, has gone on year after year, and will probably continue for a while. A usual argument for the object-based opinion has to do with the fact that JS didn't include classes and inheritance and was prototype oriented. This argument has been voided now because the latest versions of JS provide two new keywords, class and extends, which behave in pretty much the same way as their counterparts in other official OO languages. However, keep in mind that the new classes are just syntactical sugar over the existing prototype-based inheritance; no new paradigm or model was truly introduced.

JS could do inheritance, but it was harder. To see how this...