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Object-Oriented JavaScript - Second Edition

You're reading from   Object-Oriented JavaScript - Second Edition If you've limited or no experience with JavaScript, this book will put you on the road to being an expert. A wonderfully compiled introduction to objects in JavaScript, it teaches through examples and practical play.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849693127
Length 382 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Object-oriented JavaScript 2. Primitive Data Types, Arrays, Loops, and Conditions FREE CHAPTER 3. Functions 4. Objects 5. Prototype 6. Inheritance 7. The Browser Environment 8. Coding and Design Patterns A. Reserved Words B. Built-in Functions
C. Built-in Objects D. Regular Expressions
Index

Functions are data

Functions in JavaScript are actually data. This is an important concept that we'll need later on. This means that you can create a function and assign it to a variable:

var f = function () {
  return 1;
};

This way of defining a function is sometimes referred to as function literal notation.

The part function () { return 1; } is a function expression. A function expression can optionally have a name, in which case it becomes a named function expression (NFE). So, this is also allowed, although rarely seen in practice (and causes IE to mistakenly create two variables in the enclosing scope: f and myFunc):

var f = function myFunc() {
  return 1;
};

As you can see, there's no difference between a named function expression and a function declaration. But they are, in fact, different. The only way to distinguish between the two is to look at the context in which they are used. Function declarations may only appear in program code (in a body of another function or in...

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