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Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

By : Nagale
3.8 (5)
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Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

3.8 (5)
By: Nagale

Overview of this book

Knowledge of Python is a great foundation for learning other languages. This book will help you advance in your software engineering career by leveraging your Python programming skills to learn JavaScript and apply its unique features not only for frontend web development but also for streamlining work on the backend. Starting with the basics of JavaScript, you’ll cover its syntax, its use in the browser, and its frameworks and libraries. From working with user interactions and ingesting data from APIs through to creating APIs with Node.js, this book will help you get up and running with JavaScript using hands-on exercises, code snippets, and detailed descriptions of JavaScript implementation and benefits. To understand the use of JavaScript in the backend, you’ll explore Node.js and discover how it communicates with databases. As you advance, you’ll get to grips with creating your own RESTful APIs and connecting the frontend and backend for holistic full-stack development knowledge. By the end of this Python JavaScript book, you’ll have the knowledge you need to write full-fledged web applications from start to finish. You’ll have also gained hands-on experience of working through several projects, which will help you advance in your career as a JavaScript developer.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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1
Section 1 - What is JavaScript? What is it not?
6
Section 2 - Using JavaScript on the Front-End
13
Section 3 - The Back-End: Node.js vs. Python
20
Section 4 - Communicating with Databases

Punctuation and readability

As with every language, JavaScript has conventions on punctuation and how spacing affects readability. Let's take a look at a few ideas:

  • Python:
def add_one(x):
x += 1
return x
  • Java:
int add_one(int val) {
val += 1;
return val;
}
  • C++:
int add_one (int val)
{
val += 1;
return val;
}
  • JavaScript:
function addOne(val) {
return ++val
}

In JavaScript, the conventions of the preceding example are as follows:

  • No space between the function name and the parentheses.
  • A single space before the curly brace, which is on the same line.
  • The closing curly brace is on its own line, aligned with the opening statement of function.

There's also one more modern point to make here about JavaScript and the examples we'll be using in this book versus what you may encounter in the field and examples online: semicolons.

With few exceptions, in modern JavaScript, semicolons at the end of statements are optional. It used to be a best practice to always terminate...

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