Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

4.4 JavaScript (JS) Deitel Ch. 7, 8, 9, 10. 2 JavaScript & Java: Similarities JS (JavaScript) is case-sensitive Operators –arithmetic: unary +, unary.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "4.4 JavaScript (JS) Deitel Ch. 7, 8, 9, 10. 2 JavaScript & Java: Similarities JS (JavaScript) is case-sensitive Operators –arithmetic: unary +, unary."— Presentation transcript:

1 4.4 JavaScript (JS) Deitel Ch. 7, 8, 9, 10

2 2 JavaScript & Java: Similarities JS (JavaScript) is case-sensitive Operators –arithmetic: unary +, unary -, +, -, *, /, % –bit-wise: ~ (unary), &, |, >, >>> –logical: ! (unary), &&, || –strings: + (concatenation) –compound assignment: ++, --, op= where op is one of the binary operators above, e.g., +=, -=, |=, &&=, –relational: ==, !=,, = –conditional: op1 ? op2 : op3 (if op1 then op2 else op3 )

3 3 JS & Java: Similarities (cont.) Assignment with = Syntax and semantic of control structures – if – if-else – shift-case – while – do-while – for except for-in, that's different Block {…}

4 4 JS & Java: Similarities (cont.+) Syntax of identifers –e.g., index_1, theCamelNotation Syntax of numeric and string constants: –e.g., -40, 3.14, 0.1E-7, 1.2e2, NaN, "a string", 0xFF00FF, 0x0a1b2c Special characters: /n, /t, /f, /r, /", /', //, etc. Special values: null, true, false Subprogram calls: sub(p1,p2,…) Array initialization –e.g.: var cars = ["Mini", "Miata"]; Array indices begin with 0, end with length-1 Array access: cars[0]

5 5 JS & Java: Similarities (cont.++) break statement continue statement return statement Subprograms can throw exceptions –exceptions are objects, can carry information –difference: subprograms don't declare what they throw try-catch statement Object instantiation: new Name(…) All objects inherit method toString(…)

6 6 JS & Java: Differences Type-less variables vs. strongly typed Interpreted vs. hybrid Functional features vs. purely imperative Syntax: declarations, subprograms, classes, … Additional statements Different scope rules Only few standard objects vs. rich set of supporting classes (JDK) Very different Object-Oriented Facilities –object-prototype vs. class concept –no encapsulation –different inheritance –different syntax

7 7 Variables Variables can be declared with var –mandatory for locals –optional, but recommended for globals Global variables are assigned outside of functions Typing is implicit –values have types, not variables –a variable can hold a value of any type –the expression decides the type Type conversion errors are detected at run-time!

8 8 Types Types: –"primitive": undefined, null, boolean, number, string –function, object Operator typeof –returns "undefined", "boolean", "number", "string", "function" or "object" – null or arrays are also "object"s

9 9 Values Strings can be enclosed in ' – 'the "other" way' Special value: undefined – var a = [1,,, 2]; // a[1],a[2] are undefined –undefined can be tested if (value) {use(value)} else {alert("undefined value");} In a condition – 0, "", null and undefined are interpreted as false –everything else is interpreted as true –Watch out: JS doesn't protect you against misuse of values in a condition!

10 10 Arrays Array is an explicit object Array –e.g.: var cards = new Array(); –e.g.: var cards = new Array(12);//0..11 undefined –e.g.: var nos = new Array(1,2,3);//=[1,2,3] Predefined property length Assigning an element at index that didn't exist is ok –it extends the array An associative array is not an Array object –indices can be strings –array notation used for accessing an object's properties see later

11 11 Array methods push(item) appends the item at index length i.e., increments length pop() removes and returns the last item –decrements length shift() removes and returns the first item –decrements length and indices of all other items slice(from,[to]) returns the subarray from..to-1 concat(array) appends all items of array splice(from,n,[it1,it2,…]) –replaces n items starting at from by items it1,it2,… reverse(), sort(), toString()

12 12 Statements Statements don't need to be separated by ; –but they can – it's recommended – ; is needed for several statements on one line - don't do that! for-in statements assigns consecutive indices –e.g.: for (var i in anArray) {alert(anArray[i]);} with statement –allows using properties of an object without object prefix –e.g.: with (document) { write(" Greetings "); //= document.write() write(" Hi there! "); }

13 13 Subprograms Syntax – function name (…) {…} Anonymous functions – name = function (…) {…} –called the same way: name(…) Function body is stored as text –it can be retrieved and modified! Functions are data –they can be assigned to variables, stored in an array, etc. A function is an object, can be defined that way – var sum = new Function("a","b","return a+b"); A function can also define a "class" (see later)

14 14 Function Parameters It's ok to call a function with fewer parameters –you can check for undefined values –also, arguments property holds an array of all parameter values Parameter passing –by value numbers, strings, true, false, null, undefined –by reference objects Return values are passed the same way

15 15 Built-in Functions: Dialogs alert(message) –displays a modal dialog with message and OK button –often used while debugging e.g., alert("variable=" + variable); –used to display multiple lines e.g., alert("line 1\nline 2\nline3"); confirm(message) –displays a modal dialog with message and with buttons OK and Cancel –returns true if the user clicked OK –returns false if the she clicked Cancel prompt(message) –displays a modal dialog with message, input field and OK button –returns the text that the user typed into the input field

16 16 Built-in Functions (cont.) parseInt(string) –attempts to convert the string into an integer number and return it –returns the integral part of a real number or NaN if string isn't a number parseFloat(string) –attempts to convert the string into an floating point number and return it –returns NaN if string isn't a number eval(expression) –interprets the expression as JavaScript code

17 17 JavaScript Pitfalls JavaScript is "silent" –run-time errors stop script's execution –syntax errors may not matter if the code is not executed JS allows assignments within expressions –like Java –e.g. var x=++y – x=y--; //heck, what? –never use that! don't do that!

18 18 Browser Pitfalls IE just reports "runtime error" Firefox error line numbers are off –check a line before or after JS in IE is not the same as JS in Firefox is not the same as JS in Opera is not the same as … –in other words: var browsers = [Firefox,IE,Opera,Safari]; var text="You have to test and test because\n"; for (var i = 0; i < browsers.length; i++) { text+="JS in "+browsers[i]+" isn't the same as in\n"; } alert (text+"...");

19 19 JS & Java Facit: There are a lot of similarities But despite these similarities JS is very different from Java

20 20 More to Come Object-Oriented JavaScript JavaScript with DOM Events with JavaScript


Download ppt "4.4 JavaScript (JS) Deitel Ch. 7, 8, 9, 10. 2 JavaScript & Java: Similarities JS (JavaScript) is case-sensitive Operators –arithmetic: unary +, unary."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google