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Professional JavaScript for Web Developers - Fourth Edition

You're reading from  Professional JavaScript for Web Developers - Fourth Edition

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Wiley
ISBN-13 9781119366447
Pages 1144 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Matt Frisbie Matt Frisbie
Profile icon Matt Frisbie

Table of Contents (37) Chapters

COVER
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION 1 What Is JavaScript? 2 JavaScript in HTML 3 Language Basics 4 Variables, Scope, and Memory 5 Basic Reference Types 6 Collection Reference Types 7 Iterators and Generators 8 Objects, Classes, and Object-Oriented Programming 9 Proxies and Reflect 10 Functions 11 Promises and Async Functions 12 The Browser Object Model 13 Client Detection 14 The Document Object Model 15 DOM Extensions 16 DOM Levels 2 and 3 17 Events 18 Animation and Graphics with Canvas 19 Scripting Forms 20 JavaScript APIs 21 Error Handling and Debugging 22 XML in JavaScript 23 JSON 24 Network Requests and Remote Resources 25 Client-Side Storage 26 Modules 27 Workers 28 Best Practices A ES2018 and ES2019 B Strict Mode C JavaScript Libraries and Frameworks D JavaScript Tools INDEX
END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT

PARSING AND SERIALIZATION

JSON rose to popularity not necessarily because it used familiar syntax. Rather, it became popular because the data could be parsed into a usable object in JavaScript. This stood in stark contrast to XML that was parsed into a DOM document, making extraction of data into a bit of a chore for JavaScript developers. For example, the JSON code in the previous section contains a list of books, and you can easily get the title of the third book via:

books[2].title

This assumes that the data structure was stored in a variable named books. Compare this to a typical walk through of a DOM structure:

doc.getElementsByTagName("book")[2].getAttribute("title");

With all of the extra method calls, it's no wonder that JSON became incredibly popular with JavaScript developers. After that, JSON went on to become the de facto serialization standard for web services.

The JSON Object

Early JSON parsers did little more than use JavaScript's eval...

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