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JavaScript from Beginner to Professional

You're reading from   JavaScript from Beginner to Professional Learn JavaScript quickly by building fun, interactive, and dynamic web apps, games, and pages

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562523
Length 546 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Codestars By Rob Percival Codestars By Rob Percival
Author Profile Icon Codestars By Rob Percival
Codestars By Rob Percival
Laurence Svekis Laurence Svekis
Author Profile Icon Laurence Svekis
Laurence Svekis
Maaike van Putten Maaike van Putten
Author Profile Icon Maaike van Putten
Maaike van Putten
Rob Percival Rob Percival
Author Profile Icon Rob Percival
Rob Percival
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with JavaScript FREE CHAPTER 2. JavaScript Essentials 3. JavaScript Multiple Values 4. Logic Statements 5. Loops 6. Functions 7. Classes 8. Built-In JavaScript Methods 9. The Document Object Model 10. Dynamic Element Manipulation Using the DOM 11. Interactive Content and Event Listeners 12. Intermediate JavaScript 13. Concurrency 14. HTML5, Canvas, and JavaScript 15. Next Steps 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index
Appendix – Practice Exercise, Project, and Self-Check Quiz Answers

Learning the backend

So far, we have only been dealing with the frontend. The frontend is the part that is running on the client side, which could be any device that the user is using, such as a phone, laptop, or tablet. In order for websites to do interesting stuff, we also need a backend. For example, if you want to log on to a website, this website somehow needs to know whether this user exists.

This is the job of the server-side code, the backend. This is code that is running not on the device of the user, but on some sort of server elsewhere, which is often owned or leased by the company hosting the website. Hosting the website usually means that they make it available to the world wide web by placing it on a server that can take outside requests via a URL.

The code on the server does many things, all related to deeper logic and data. For example, an e-commerce store has a bunch of items in the shop that come from a database. The server gets the items from the database...

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