SEARCH KEYWORD -- warts
Avoiding and exploiting JavaScript's warts
One's sentiment toward JavaScript flips between elegance and disgust without transiting intermediate states. The key to seeing JavaScript as elegant is understanding its warts, and knowing how to avoid, work around or even exploit them. I adopted this avoid/fix/exploit approach after reading Doug Crockford's JavaScript: The Good Parts: Doug has a slightly different and more elaborate take on the bad parts and awful parts, so I'm sharing my perspective on the four issues that ha...
JavaScript,warts,Exploit,with,variable,this 2012-02-15 05:51:21
JavaScript as a First Language
At Khan Academy we've been investigating teaching Computer Science to students in some new and interesting ways. The most interesting aspect of which is that we're likely going to be teaching them JavaScript as their first language. We're in a very unique position as we're primarily aiming to teach students who've been through our previous math and science-centric curriculum. Because of this we can create some rather compelling exercises and projects that never would've been feasible other...
JavaScript,Learning,First language,Inheritence,Prototype 2011-12-23 07:53:45
Google Dart? Don’t bet against JavaScript
Procotols, programming languages and operating systems all compete in a constantly evolving software ecosystem. Out of that ecosystem only a few technologies truly have staying power and survive over the long term. An example? How about Ethernet? It’s been a survivor over the last thirty years despite existing in a constantly changing landscape that’s been populated with many worthy competitors. Ethernetâ€...
Google Dart,JavaScript,Comparison,Future 2011-12-06 09:49:39
Why Javascript is a Joy
I’m probably a bit biased – being a front-end web developer for a few years will do that – but I really enjoy writing Javascript. I’ve recently retreated from pure coding the last few months, but I got an opportunity this past week to jump back into some tasks, and it has reminded me how fun it is to dive into our[1] front-end codebase. Yes, Javascript can be surprisingly elegant yet completely infuriating, and all on the same line of code; for a long time, ...
JavaScript,Speed,Simplicity,Malleable 2012-03-26 15:00:31
JavaScript is now a necessity
I've long looked at JavaScript as a second-class citizen in the programming world. Early on, it was the source of numerous security problems; it was a nice bit of glue to patch together HTML applications with a bit of styling, but nobody would use it for serious code; and so forth. Java, Ruby, Python, they were the languages for doing real work. But my attitude toward JavaScript has changed completely in the past few years. JavaScript has "grown up." I'm sure there are many JavaScript dev...
JavaScript,HTML5,Necessary,Client langua 2011-06-24 00:50:14
PHP: a fractal of bad design
Preface I’m cranky. I complain about a lot of things. There’s a lot in the world of technology I don’t like, and that’s really to be expected—programming is a hilariously young discipline, and none of us have the slightest clue what we’re doing. Combine with Sturgeon’s Law, and I have a lifetime’s worth of stuff to gripe about. This is not the same. PHP is not merely awkward to use, or ill-suited for what I want, or suboptimal, or...
RECENT
- Tips for Socializing With Friends During College
- Proximity Cards Do More Than Just Open Doors
- How to choose quality painted auto parts
- Oval engagement rings from MoonOcean: Elegance of form and individual approach
- Hologres vs AWS Redshift
- GoLand connect to Hologres
- A journey to investigate a goroutine leakage case
- Understanding Slice Behavior in Go
- Breaking Barriers: How 3D Printing is Democratizing Product Development
- The Power of Efficiency: 10 Practical Energy-Saving Tips for Tech Startups
- more>>