Why a JavaScript hater thinks everyone needs to learn JavaScript in the next year - O'R... - 1 views
radar.oreilly.com/...time-to-learn-javascript.html
JavaScript HTML+ Node.JS JQuery web-apps web-application-development
shared by Gary Edwards on 07 Jun 11
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some extremely important game-changers: jQuery, JSON, Node.js, and HTML5.
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.js has the potential to revolutionize web development. It is a framework for building high performance web applications: applications that can respond very quickly and efficiently to a high volume of incoming requests.
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HTML5, then, isn't really a major advance in angle-bracket-based tagging; it's about enabling JavaScr
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JavaScript has long been the workhorse for implementing dynamic features in HTML. But there have always been two problems: browser incompatibilities, and the awkwardness of working directly with the DOM. The JQuery library has elegantly solved both problems, and is the basis for modern client-side browser development.
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Web servers, rich web client libraries, HTML5, databases, even JavaScript-based languages: I see JavaScript everywhere.
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OK, this article gets my vote as the most important read of the year. We all know that the the Web is the future of both computing and communications/connectivity. But wha tis the future of the Web? Uber coder Mike Loukides says it's JavaScript, and what a compelling case he builds. This is a must read. Key concepts are diigo highlighted :) excerpt: JavaScript has "grown up." I'm sure there are many JavaScript developers who would take issue with that judgement, and argue that JavaScript has been a capable, mature, and under-appreciated language all along. They may be right, though you can write any program in any complete programming language, including awful things like BASIC. What makes a language useful is some combination of the language's expressiveness and the libraries and tools available. JavaScript clearly passed the expressiveness barrier a long time ago, even if the ceremony required for creating objects is distasteful. But recently, we've seen some extremely important game-changers: jQuery, JSON, Node.js, and HTML5. JavaScript may have been a perfectly adequate language in the past, but these changes (and a few others that I'll point out) have made JavaScript a language that is essential for every developer to know. If there's one language you need to learn in the next year, it's JavaScript. Insightful comment: HTML5 is a JavaScript API, introducing new elements but significantly redefining ALL elements as objects or classes. Elements can be expressed with tags. Or, you can use DOM JavaScripting to create elements.