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Learn ECMAScript

You're reading from   Learn ECMAScript Discover the latest ECMAScript features in order to write cleaner code and learn the fundamentals of JavaScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788620062
Length 298 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Narayan Prusty Narayan Prusty
Author Profile Icon Narayan Prusty
Narayan Prusty
MEHUL MOHAN MEHUL MOHAN
Author Profile Icon MEHUL MOHAN
MEHUL MOHAN
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with ECMAScript FREE CHAPTER 2. Knowing Your Library 3. Using Iterators 4. Asynchronous Programming 5. Modular Programming 6. Implementing the Reflect API 7. Proxies 8. Classes 9. JavaScript on the Web 10. Storage APIs in JavaScript 11. Web and Service Workers 12. Shared Memory and Atomics 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introduction to web workers


The web worker is, essentially, a piece of JS code which does not run in the same thread as your main application. And by thread, I literally mean a different thread. The web workers truly enable JS to work in a multi-threaded mode. A question that might arise here is, What are the differences between asynchronous operations and web workers?

If you think about it, they are more or less the same thing. The web workers take away loads from the main thread for a while and then come back with the results. However understand the fact that async functions run on the UI thread, whereas web workers do not. Also, web workers are long-lived, and live inside a separate thread, whereas asynchronous operators, as we discussed in Chapter 4, Asynchronous Programming, follow the Event loop.

Performance-wise, web workers are also much faster than traditional asynchronous operations. Here's a test which sorts randomly generated arrays of lengths 10K and 1M as an asynchronous operation...

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