Beginning JavaScript by Jeremy McPeak, Paul Wilton

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Synopsis

JavaScript is the preferred programming language for Web page applications, letting you enhance your sites with interactive, dynamic, and personalized pages. This fully updated guide shows you how to take advantage of JavaScript’s client-side scripting techniques for the newest versions of Netscape® and Internet Explorer®, even if you’ve never programmed before.

You will begin with basic syntax and learn about data types and how to structure code for decision-making. Then you’ll learn to use dates, strings, and other basic objects of JavaScript. Next, you will see how to use JavaScript to manipulate objects provided by the browser, such as forms and windows. From there you will move into advanced topics like using cookies and dynamic HTML.

After you have a solid foundation, you will explore dynamic generation of Web content using server-side scripting and back-end databases. And you’ll practice what you learn by building a sample application as you go.

What you will learn from this book

  • What types of data are used in JavaScript
  • How to identify and correct flaws in your code
  • Techniques for programming the browser
  • How to use Microsoft® Script Debugger and Netscape Script Debugger
  • Ways to manage cross-browser issues
  • How JavaScript interacts with XML and HTML

Who this book is for

This book is for anyone who wants to learn JavaScript programming. You should have some understanding of HTML and how to create static Web pages, but no prior programming experience is necessary.

Wrox Beginning guides are crafted to make learning programming languages and technologies easier than you think, providing a structured, tutorial format that will guide you through all the techniques involved.

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Biography

Paul Wilton started as a Visual Bacic applications programmer at the Ministry of Defense in the UK, then found himself pulled into the Net. Having joined an Intermet development company, he spent three years helping create Internet solutions. He's now running his own successful and rapidly growing company developing online holiday property reservation systems.

Jeremy McPeak began tinkering with web development as a hobby in 1998. Currently working in IT department of a school district, Jeremy has experience developing web solutions with JavaScript, PHP, and C#. He has written several online articles covering topics such as XSLT, WebForms, and C#. He is also co-author of Professional Ajax.

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  • Ratings: 1

Good, but supposedly incomplete.by Simnia

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October 21, 2008: This was a textbook I used as a student at a community college. I thought it was good, although the teacher claimed it was missing basics about form validation. The teacher recommended instead: "Javascript : The Complete Reference" by Thomas Powell and Fritz Schneider, which is the same price, but I can't vouch for that recommended book's readability / understandability since I never looked at it in detail. This reviewed book touched on a lot of topics I had been wanting to learn, and it described them in an understandable way, such as CSS, DOM, DHTML, XML, Ajax, plug-ins, nuances of increment operators like in , and there is nice coverage of cookies. The book was invaluable to me at one point because it explained why our computer at work kept throwing up JavaScript errors in such profusion that the PC became virtually unusable, and the book showed how to disable those error messages, which made our PC usable again. A lady in our class had the same problem with her home computer, and that was one of her first questions when the class started. The book's warning about wrong use of the length function also allowed me to detect an error in an online test I was given as employment prescreening. One minor complaint I have about this book is that acronyms and definitions are not collected into one place, and some acronyms like XSLT, IIS, MSXML, MSIE, and ASP are never defined, though I already knew some of them, or else they were easy enough to guess. There were a few typographical errors I spotted in English sentences. The book had good insights into cross-browser compatibility, and I never realized until reading this book how much work JavaScript programmers had to do to ensure such compatibility. The chapter on Common Mistakes was a great idea, though I would have preferred to see a longer list, and to have it laid out in order, based on statistics of how often those errors are encountered by neophytes.

I Also Recommend: Javascript, JavaScript for the World Wide Web, Beginning PHP and MySQL 5.