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Learn WebAssembly

Learn WebAssembly

By : Rourke
2.3 (4)
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Learn WebAssembly

Learn WebAssembly

2.3 (4)
By: Rourke

Overview of this book

WebAssembly is a brand-new technology that represents a paradigm shift in web development. This book teaches programmers to leverage this technology to write high-performance applications that run in the browser. This book introduces you to powerful WebAssembly concepts to help you write lean and powerful web applications with native performance. You start with the evolution of web programming, the state of things today, and what can be done with the advent and release of WebAssembly. We take a look at the journey from JavaScript to asm.js to WebAssembly. We then move on to analyze the anatomy of a WebAssembly module and the relationship between binary and text formats, along with the corresponding JavaScript API. Further on, you'll implement all the techniques you've learned to build a high-performance application using C and WebAssembly, and then port an existing game written in C++ to WebAssembly using Emscripten. By the end of this book, you will be well-equipped to create high-performance applications and games for the web using WebAssembly.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Why Node.js?


In Chapter 3, Setting Up a Development Environment, Node.js was described as an asynchronous event-driven JavaScript runtime, which is the definition taken from the official website. What Node.js represents, however, is a profound shift in the way we build and manage web applications. In this section, we will discuss the relationship between WebAssembly and Node.js, and why the two technologies complement each other so well.

Seamless integration

Node.js runs on Google's V8 JavaScript engine, which powers Google Chrome. Since V8's WebAssembly implementation adheres to the Core Specification, you can interact with a WebAssembly module using the same API as the browser. Instead of performing a fetch call for a .wasm file, you can use Node.js's fs module to read the contents into a buffer, then call instantiate() on the result.

 

Complementary technologies

JavaScript has limitations on the server side as well. Expensive computation or working with large numbers can be optimized with...

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