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let txt = "";
let txt = "";
const showF = (value) => txt += `${value.name value.price<br>}`;  
const showF = (value) => txt += `${value.name value.price'<br>'}`;  
myArr.forEach(showF);
myArr.forEach(showF);
console.log(txt);
console.log(txt);

Revision as of 21:14, 15 November 2023

THIS IS A DRAFT

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title
JavaScript
author
Lukasz Sokolowski (NobleProg)


JavaScript

JavaScript Training Materials

JavaScript Intro ⌘

  • Names, versions, etc
  • Finished proposals

What is this buzz all about? ⌘

  • All the JavaScript acronyms can be confusing
  • Was originally named JavaScript in hopes of capitalizing on the success of Java
  • JavaScript was submitted to ECMA International for Standardization (organization that standardizes information)
  • ECMAScript is a standard

Other names ⌘

  • ES is simply short for ECMAScript
  • ES followed by a number is referencing an edition of ECMAScript
  • There are 8 editions of ECMAScript published
  • ES1: June 1997, ES2: June 1998, ES3: Dec 1999, ES4: Abandoned, due to political differences
  • ES5: Dec 2009 - presently fully supported by all most popular web browsers
  • ES6 / ES2015: June 2015 - the decision was make to move to annual updates
    • From now on official name reflects the year of release (no longer ES7, ES8, etc)
  • ES2016: June 2016, ES2017: June 2017

Finished proposals ⌘

ECMAScript 2015 ⌘

ECMAScript 2016 ⌘

  • Array.prototype.includes
  • Exponentiation infix operator

Array.prototype.includes ⌘

  • includes instance method on the Array
  • Helps to easily find if an item is in the Array (including NaN unlike indexOf)
const setty = ['me', 'doing', 'js', NaN];

// Before, and doesn't search NaN
if ( setty.indexOf("js") >= 0 ) { console.log(true); }
setty.indexOf(NaN); // false

// Now, and searches NaN
if ( setty.includes("js") ) { console.log(true); }
setty.includes(NaN);  // true

Exponentiation infix operator ⌘

  • In exponent operation the ** was introduced instead of Math.pow
// Earlier
Math.pow(7, 2)

// Now
7**2

ECMAScript 2017 ⌘

  • Object.values()
  • Object.entries()
  • String padding
  • Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors
  • Trailing commas, function parameters
  • Async/Await

Object.values() ⌘

  • New function similar to Object.keys()
  • Returns all the values of the Object’s own properties
    • but excluding any value(s) in the prototypical chain
const bookPrices = { Thud: 20, LOTR: 50, Drupal8: 30 };

// Before
const prices = Object.keys(bookPrices).map( priceKey => bookPrices[priceKey]); 
console.log(prices); // [20, 50, 30]

// Now
const prices1 = Object.values(bookPrices);
console.log(prices1); // [20, 50, 30]

Object.entries() ⌘

  • Also similar to Object.keys()
    • Returns as array both, keys and values
    • Simplifies using objects in loops or converting objects into Maps
const bookPrices = { Thud: 20, LOTR: 50, Drupal8: 30 };
const map = new Map();

// Extracting keys and looping; map
Object.keys(bookPrices).forEach( function(priceKey) {
    console.log('Book: ' + priceKey + ' costs: ' + bookPrices[priceKey]);
    map.set(priceKey, bookPrices[priceKey]);
});
console.log(map); // Map(3) {"Thud" => 20, "LOTR" => 50, "Drupal8" => 30}

// Easier (-:
for ( let [k, v] of Object.entries(bookPrices) ) {
    console.log(`Book: ${k} costs: ${v}`);
};

const map1 = new Map(Object.entries(bookPrices));
console.log(map1);

String padding ⌘

  • Two new instance methods
    • String.prototype.padStart and String.prototype.padEnd
    • allow appending/prepending string (also empty one) to the start or the end of the original string
// printing multiple items of varying lengths and right-aligning them properly
const bookPrices = { 'Thud': '200', 'LOTR': '50', 'Drupal8': '5' };

Object.entries(bookPrices).map(([row, count]) => {
  // padEnd appends ' ~' until the row becomes 25 characters
  // padStart prepends '0' until the count becomes 4 characters
  console.log(`${row.padEnd(25, ' ~')} Costs: ${count.padStart(4, '0')}`)
});

//Prints..
// Thud ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~  Costs: 0200
// LOTR ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~  Costs: 0050
// Drupal8 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Costs: 0005

Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors ⌘

  • Returns all the details for all the properties of a given object
    • including methods get and set
  • Allows shallow copying / cloning an object into another object
    • that also copies getter and setter functions (as opposed to Object.assign)
var Comic = {
 title: 'Thorgal', price: 100,
 set discount(amount) {
  this.d = amount;
 },
 get discount() {
  return this.d;
 },
};

// Print details of Comic object's 'discount' property
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(Comic, 'discount'));
// Prints.. { get: [Function: get], set: [Function: set], enumerable: true, configurable: true }

// Copy Comic's properties to KindleComic using Object.assign
const KindleComic = Object.assign({}, Comic);

// Print details of KindleComic object's 'discount' property
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(KindleComic, 'discount'));
// prints.. { value: undefined, writable: true, enumerable: true, configurable: true }
// getters and setters are missing..  )-:


// Copy Comic's properties to KindleComic2 using Object.defineProperties 
// and extract Comic's properties using Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors
const KindleComic2 = Object.defineProperties({}, Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors(Comic));

//Print details of KindleComic2 object's 'discount' property
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(KindleComic2, 'discount'));
//prints.. { get: [Function: get], set: [Function: set], enumerable: true, configurable: true }
// getters and setters are present in the ElectricCar2 object for 'discount' property  (--8

Trailing commas, function parameters ⌘

  • Allows us to have trailing commas after the last function parameter
  • Helps with tools like git blame to ensure only new developers get blamed
function Comic (
  title,
  year // Devel1 does this without ','
  ){
  this.title = title;
  this.year = year;
}

function Comic (
  title,
  year,  // Devel2 has to add ','
  genre  // Devel2 can add new parameter now
  ){
  this.title = title;
  this.year = year;
  this.genre = genre;  // Devel2 adds
}

// Solution
function Comic (
  title,
  year, // Devel2 doesn't need to change here (-:
  ){
  this.title = title;
  this.year = year;
}

Async/Await ⌘

  • Async functions
    • no callback hell
    • make the entire code look simple
  • When seeing async keyword, JavaScript compiler treats the function differently
    • pauses whenever it reaches the await keyword within that function
    • assumes that the expression after await returns a promise
    • and waits until the promise is resolved or rejected before moving further

Basic example ⌘

// Usual promise way
function getInvoice(clientId) {
  getClient(clientId)
    .then(getFromTool)
    .then(invoice => {
      console.log(invoice);
    });
}

// New way
async function getInvoice2(clientId) {
  var client = await getClient(clientId);
  var invoice = await getFromTool(client);
  console.log(invoice);
}

getInvoice("Sam Sung");
getInvoice2("Sam Sung");

function getClient(clientId) {
  return new Promise( resolve => {
    setTimeout( () => {
      resolve("Sam Sung");
    }, 1000);
  });
}

function getFromTool(clientId) {
  return new Promise( (resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout( () => {
      if ( clientId == "Sam Sung" ) {
        resolve("Inv2-03052017");
      } else {
        reject("Unknown client");
      }
    }, 1000);
  });
}
Exercise ⌘

Fix the example above (-:

Async functions themselves return a Promise ⌘

  • If we are waiting for the result from an async function
    • we need to use Promise’s then syntax to capture its result
async function glueScrabble(w1, w2) {
 w1 = await fixLetters(w1);
 w2 = await fixLetters(w2);
 return w1 + w2;
}

glueScrabble('a', 'b').then(console.log);

function fixLetters(letter) {
  return new Promise ( resolve => {

   setTimeout( () => { resolve( letter.toUpperCase() ) }, 5000); 
  });
}

Calling async/await in parallel ⌘

  • Instead of calling await twice and each time waiting for five seconds (total 10 seconds)
    • we can parallelize it since a and b are not dependent on each other using Promise.all
async function glueScrabble2(w1, w2) {
  // with Array destructuring 
  [w1, w2] = await Promise.all( [fixLetters(w1), fixLetters(w2)] );
 return w1 + w2;
}

glueScrabble2('a', 'b').then(console.log);

Error handling async/await functions

  • Use try catch within the function
  • Catch every await expression
  • Catch the entire async-await function
Use try catch within the function
// Use try catch within the function
async function glueScrabble3(w1, w2) {
  try {
    w1 = await fixLetters3(w1);
    w2 = await fixLetters3(w2);
  } catch (e) {
    return e.name;
  }
  return w1 + w2;
}

// Usage:
glueScrabble3(23, 'b').then(console.log);  // "TypeError"
glueScrabble3('a', 'b').then(console.log); // AB

function fixLetters3(letter) {
 return new Promise( (resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout( function() {
    if ( typeof letter == "number" ) throw "Number given, should be a string"; 
    let val = letter.toUpperCase(); console.log(val);
    (!val) ? reject('TypeError') : resolve(val);
  }, 1000);
 });
}
Catch every await expression
// Catch errors on every await line
// each await expression is a Promise in itself
async function glueScrabble4(w1, w2) {
  w1 = await fixLetters4(w1).catch(e => console.log('"w1" is a Number')); // Yep (-:
  w2 = await fixLetters4(w2).catch(e => console.log('"w2" is a Number')); // Yep (-:
  if ( !w1 || !w2 ) {
    return 'Both are numbers';
  }
  return w1 + w2;
}

//Usage:
glueScrabble4(234, 'a').then(console.log); // 'TypeError' and logs:  "w1" is a Number
glueScrabble4('a', 'b').then(console.log); // AB

function fixLetters4(letter) {
 return new Promise( (resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout( function() {
    let val = letter.toUpperCase(); // console.log(val);
    (!val) ? reject('TypeError') : resolve(val);
  }, 1000);
 });
}
Catch the entire async-await function
//Option 3 - Don't do anything but handle outside the function
//since async / await returns a promise, we can catch the whole function's error
async function doubleAndAdd(a, b) {
 a = await doubleAfter1Sec(a);
 b = await doubleAfter1Sec(b);
 return a + b;
}
//Usage:
doubleAndAdd('one', 2)
.then(console.log)
.catch(console.log); // <------- use "catch"

function doubleAfter1Sec(param) {
 return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout(function() {
   let val = param * 2;
   isNaN(val) ? reject(NaN) : resolve(val);
  }, 1000);
 });
}

Example from Ecma docs ⌘

d3js examples ⌘

  • ch5, index.js
  • ch2, index.js

ECMAScript 2018 ⌘

  • Rest / spread properties
  • Asynchronous iteration
  • Promise.finally()
  • Additions to RegExp

rest / spread properties

  • allows to destruct an object and collect the leftovers onto a new object

Examples

let { x, y, ...z } = { x: 1, y: 2, a: 3, b: 4 };
x; // 1
y; // 2
z; // { a: 3, b: 4 }

// or longer:
let object = {a: 1, b: 2}
let objectClone = Object.assign({}, object) // before ES2018
let objectClone = {...object} // ES2018 syntax
let otherObject = {c: 3, ...object}
console.log(otherObject) // -> {c: 3, a: 1, b: 2}

Promise.prototype.finally()

  • Allow running a callback after either resolve or reject to help clean things up
  • The finally callback is called without any value and is always executed no matter what
// Resolve case...

let started = true;

let myPromise = new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
	resolve('all good');
})
  .then(val => {
    console.log(val); // logs 'all good'
  })
  .catch(e => {
    console.log(e); // skipped
  })
  .finally(() => {
    console.log('This function is always executed!');

    started = false; // clean up
  });

Promise.prototype.finally() Con't

  • Error handling example
// Error cas 1...
// Error thrown from Promise

let started = true;

let myPromise = new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
	throw new Error('Error');
})
  .then(val => {
    console.log(val); // skipped
  })
  .catch(e => {
    console.log(e); // catch is called since there was an error
  })
  .finally(() => {
    // Notice that no value is passed here!
    console.log('This function is always executed!');

    started = false; // clean up
  });

Asynchronous Iteration

  • Asynchronous iterators and iterables
    • we can use the await keyword in for/of loops
  • Syntax for await () {}

Examples

const promises = [
  new Promise(resolve => resolve(1)),
  new Promise(resolve => resolve(2)),
  new Promise(resolve => resolve(3)),
];

// BEFORE:
// for-of uses regular sync iterator
// Doesn't wait for promise to resolve
async function test1(){
  for (const obj of promises){
    console.log(obj); // Logs 3 promise objects
  }
}

// AFTER:
// for-await-of uses Async iterator
// Waits for Promise to resolve for each loop
async function test2(){
  for await (const obj of promises){
    console.log(obj); // Logs 1, 2, 3
  }
}

test1(); // promise, promise, promise

test2(); // 1, 2, 3 ...prints values

Additions to RegExp

  • Unicode Property Escapes (\p{...})
  • Lookbehind Assertions (?<= ) and (?<! )
  • Named Capture Groups
  • s (dotAll) Flag

Execution improvements

  • Threads - using the Web Workers API to create threads
    • Worker threads
      • are used to execute code in the background - main program can continue execution
      • run simultaneously with the main program - it can be time-saving
  • Shared Memory - allows threads (different parts of a program)
    • to access and update the same data in the same memory
    • no passing data between threads
    • instead we can pass a SharedArrayBuffer object that points to the memory where data is saved
  • SharedArrayBuffer
    • object which represents a fixed-length raw binary data buffer
    • similar to the ArrayBuffer object

ES2019

  • String.trimStart() and String.trimEnd()
  • Object.fromEntries
  • Array.flat() and Array.flatMap()
  • Revised Array.Sort()
  • Revised JSON.stringify()
  • Separator symbols allowed in string litterals
  • Revised Function.toString()
  • Optional catch binding

String related

Examples

let text1 = "     Hi Universe!     ";
let text2 = text1.trimStart();
let text3 = text1.trimEnd();

Arrays related

  • Array.prototype.flat(), Array.prototype.flatMap(), Object.fromEntries()

Examples

// Example of Array.prototype.flat() and Array.prototype.flatMap() in ES10
let array = [1, 2, [3, 4]];
console.log(array.flat()); // Output: [1, 2, 3, 4]

let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4];
console.log(numbers.flatMap(x => [x, x*2])); // Output: [1, 2, 2, 4, 3, 6, 4, 8]

// Example of Object.fromEntries() in ES10
let entries = [['name', 'John Doe'], ['age', 30]];
console.log(Object.fromEntries(entries)); // Output: { name: "John Doe", age: 30 }

Arrays related Con't

  • More stable Array sort() method
    • previously unstable sorting algorithms (ie. QuickSort) were allowed
    • now only stable can be used
    • When sorting, elements must keep their relative position to other elements with the same value

Example

const myArr = [
  {name:"X00",price:100 },
  {name:"X01",price:100 },
  {name:"X04",price:110 },
  {name:"X05",price:110 },
  {name:"X08",price:120 },
  {name:"X09",price:120 },
];

myArr.sort( (p1, p2) => {
  if (p1.price < p2.price) return -1;
  if (p1.price > p2.price) return 1;
  return 0;
});

let txt = "";
const showF = (value) => txt += `${value.name value.price'<br>'}`; 
myArr.forEach(showF);
console.log(txt);
/*
when sorting on price, such result is not allowed to come:
X01 100
X00 100
X09 120
X08 120
*/

Optional catch

  • Can be omitted if not needed

Example

// Before 2019:
try {
// code
} catch (err) {
// code
}

// After 2019:
try {
// code
} catch {
// code
}

State of JS

https://stateofjs.com/

jQuery Standards

http://lab.abhinayrathore.com/jquery-standards/

Polish US codes

http://crd.gov.pl/xml/schematy/dziedzinowe/mf/2018/08/24/eD/DefinicjeTypy/KodyUrzedowSkarbowych_v5-0E.xsd