1. Working with JavaScript Data Types.- 2. Working with Expressions.- 3. Working with Strings.- 4. Working with Numbers and Math.- 5. Working with Bitwise Operations against 32-bit Integers.- 6. Dates and Times.- 7. Working with Arrays.- 8. Working with Arrays in Loops.- 9. Working with Objects.- 10. Working with Sets.- 11. Working with Maps.- 12. Working with Functions.- 13. Working with Generators.- 14. Working with Template Literals.- 15. Working with Symbols.- 16. Working with Proxies.- 17. Working with Classes.- 18. Working with Events.- 19. Debugging and Handling Exceptions.- 20. Working with Regular Expressions.- 21. Working with Asynchronous Control Flow and Promises.- 22. Working with Modules.
Russ Ferguson is a freelance developer and
instructor in the New York City area. His interest in computers
goes back to Atari Basic, CompuServe and BBS systems in the
mid-1980s. For over 10 years, he has been fortunate to teach at
Pratt Institute, where subjects have been as diverse as the student
body. Working in New York has given him the opportunity to work
with a diverse group of companies whose projects ranged from
developing real-time chat/video applications for start-ups to
developing and managing content management systems for established
Media and Advertising agencies like MTV and DC Comics.
Keith Cirkel is a JavaScript Consultant from London,
United Kingdom, specializing in writing open source JavaScript
libraries and literature. To find out more about his work, visit
http://keithcirkel.co.uk, reach him via GitHub at
github.com/keithamus, or Twitter at twitter.com/keithamus.
“Russ Ferguson and Keith Cirkel have managed to write an
interesting book about JavaScript with some interesting knowledge.
… This really feels like going through a forum and reading only the
good topics of a given subject … . In general, if you are an
advanced beginner, who has some ideas about JS, you would be able
to profit from the book quite a lot! Enjoy it!” (Vitosh,
vitoshacademy.com, August, 2018)
“Ferguson, a freelance developer and instructor at Pratt Institute,
and Cirkel, a London-based consultant, have produced a useful set
of descriptions (‘recipes’) for the JavaScript (ECMAScript)
language, including features of version 6 of the language, which
was finalized in 2015. … Each recipe has a title and four
subsections: ‘Problem,’ ‘Solution,’ ‘The Code,’ and ‘How It Works.’
… Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above;
faculty and professionals.” (C. Vickery, Choice, Vol. 54 (11),
July, 2017)
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