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Object-Oriented JavaScript

You're reading from   Object-Oriented JavaScript Learn everything you need to know about object-oriented JavaScript (OOJS)

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785880568
Length 550 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Stoyan STEFANOV Stoyan STEFANOV
Author Profile Icon Stoyan STEFANOV
Stoyan STEFANOV
Ved Antani Ved Antani
Author Profile Icon Ved Antani
Ved Antani
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Object-Oriented JavaScript FREE CHAPTER 2. Primitive Data Types, Arrays, Loops, and Conditions 3. Functions 4. Objects 5. ES6 Iterators and Generators 6. Prototype 7. Inheritance 8. Classes and Modules 9. Promises and Proxies 10. The Browser Environment 11. Coding and Design Patterns 12. Testing and Debugging 13. Reactive Programming and React A. Reserved Words B. Built-in Functions
C. Built-in Objects D. Regular Expressions
E. Answers to Exercise Questions

Exercises


In the previous chapters, the solutions to the exercises could be found in the text of the chapter. This time, some of the exercises require you to do some more reading, or experimentation, outside this book.

  1. BOM: As a BOM exercise, try coding something wrong, obtrusive, user-unfriendly, and all in all, very Web 1.0, the shaking browser window. Try implementing code that opens a 200 x 200 pop up window and then resizes it slowly and gradually to 400 x 400. Next, move the window around as if there's an earthquake. All you'll need is one of the move*() functions, one or more calls to setInterval(), and maybe one to setTimeout()/clearInterval() to stop the whole thing. Or, here's an easier one-print the current date/time in document.title and update it every second, like a clock.

  2. DOM:

    • Implement walkDOM() differently. Also, make it accept a callback function instead of hard coding console.log().

    • Removing content with innerHTML is easy (document.body.innerHTML = ''), but not always best...

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