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CoffeeScript Application Development

You're reading from   CoffeeScript Application Development What JavaScript user wouldn't want to be able to dramatically reduce application development time? This book will teach you the clean, elegant CoffeeScript language and show you how to build stunning applications.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782162667
Length 258 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Ian Greenleaf Young Ian Greenleaf Young
Author Profile Icon Ian Greenleaf Young
Ian Greenleaf Young
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

CoffeeScript Application Development
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Running a CoffeeScript Program FREE CHAPTER 2. Writing Your First Lines of CoffeeScript 3. Building a Simple Application 4. Improving Our Application 5. Classes in CoffeeScript 6. Refactoring with Classes 7. Advanced CoffeeScript Usage 8. Going Asynchronous 9. Debugging 10. Using CoffeeScript in More Places 11. CoffeeScript on the Server Index

Calling methods statically on classes


Most of the time we want the methods we attach to a class to be available on every instance of that class. In JavaScript, this means attaching them to the class prototype. Occasionally, though, we wish to attach a method to the class itself, so that it is always available from a single reference without instantiating any objects. These are commonly known as static methods or class methods. These types of method declarations are sometimes used to group many utility functions under a single namespace (think of the Math class in the standard JavaScript library). Let's build one of those.

class Bicycle
  @frameSizeByHeight = (riderHeight) ->
    Math.floor riderHeight * 0.82

for h in [60, 68, 72]
  console.log "A #{h}\" rider needs a size " +
    "#{Bicycle.frameSizeByHeight h} bike."

We have a Bicycle class. One common calculation related to bikes is determining what size bike someone needs given their height. It doesn't make sense for us to construct...

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