Book Image

JavaScript Projects for Kids

By : Syed Omar Faruk Towaha
Book Image

JavaScript Projects for Kids

By: Syed Omar Faruk Towaha

Overview of this book

JavaScript is the most widely-used programming language for web development and that's not all! It has evolved over the years and is now being implemented in an array of environments from websites to robotics. Learning JavaScript will help you see the broader picture of web development. This book will take your imagination to new heights by teaching you how to work with JavaScript from scratch. It will introduce you to HTML and CSS to enhance the appearance of your applications. You’ll then use your skills to build on a cool Battleship game! From there, the book will introduce you to jQuery and show you how you can manipulate the DOM. You’ll get to play with some cool stuff using Canvas and will learn how to make use of Canvas to build a game on the lines of Pacman, only a whole lot cooler! Finally, it will show you a few tricks with OOP to make your code clean and will end with a few road maps on areas you can explore further.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
JavaScript Projects for Kids
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


We are at the end of the book. This book is not everything on JavaScript. It is the starting of JavaScript. I hope you enjoyed the book and practiced all the exercises and projects that were discussed in the book. I hope that you will visit the websites in this chapter and observe the codes of each project in order to learn more about JavaScript. I hope that someday you will create your own dynamic website with the help of JavaScript, build a smartphone app with JavaScript, and you may also be able to build a robot using JavaScript. You never know!

I hope that you have learned a lot of awesome things to explore with JavaScript; now it's your time to experiment with code and play with JavaScript. Don't worry if anything goes wrong. Keep in mind:

 

"It's not at all important to get it right the first time. It's vitally important to get it right the last time."

 
 --Andrew Hunt and David Thomas