Book Image

JavaScript from Beginner to Professional

By : Laurence Lars Svekis, Maaike van Putten, Codestars By Rob Percival
4 (5)
Book Image

JavaScript from Beginner to Professional

4 (5)
By: Laurence Lars Svekis, Maaike van Putten, Codestars By Rob Percival

Overview of this book

This book demonstrates the capabilities of JavaScript for web application development by combining theoretical learning with code exercises and fun projects that you can challenge yourself with. The guiding principle of the book is to show how straightforward JavaScript techniques can be used to make web apps ranging from dynamic websites to simple browser-based games. JavaScript from Beginner to Professional focuses on key programming concepts and Document Object Model manipulations that are used to solve common problems in professional web applications. These include data validation, manipulating the appearance of web pages, working with asynchronous and concurrent code. The book uses project-based learning to provide context for the theoretical components in a series of code examples that can be used as modules of an application, such as input validators, games, and simple animations. This will be supplemented with a brief crash course on HTML and CSS to illustrate how JavaScript components fit into a complete web application. As you learn the concepts, you can try them in your own editor or browser console to get a solid understanding of how they work and what they do. By the end of this JavaScript book, you will feel confident writing core JavaScript code and be equipped to progress to more advanced libraries, frameworks, and environments such as React, Angular, and Node.js.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Callbacks

Callbacks are the first thing we should understand when we are talking about concurrency. The good news is that the callback principle is not too hard to understand. It is just a function that takes another function as an argument, which is then called when the rest of the initial function has finished. In other words, it's just a function calling a function, like this:

function doSomething(callback) {  
    callback();
}
function sayHi() {
    console.log("Hi!");
}
doSomething(sayHi);

The doSomething() function, which is created with the parameter callback, is just calling whatever function is being passed in as an argument. We call it using the sayHi() function as an argument, so this code snippet is just a very complicated way to get Hi! printed to the console.

Here is an example of the callback principle actually doing something:

function judge(grade) {
    switch (true) {
        case grade == "A":
            console.log(&quot...