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Hands-On JavaScript High Performance

You're reading from   Hands-On JavaScript High Performance Build faster web apps using Node.js, Svelte.js, and WebAssembly

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838821098
Length 376 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Justin Scherer Justin Scherer
Author Profile Icon Justin Scherer
Justin Scherer
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Tools for High Performance on the Web 2. Immutability versus Mutability - The Balance between Safety and Speed FREE CHAPTER 3. Vanilla Land - Looking at the Modern Web 4. Practical Example - A Look at Svelte and Being Vanilla 5. Switching Contexts - No DOM, Different Vanilla 6. Message Passing - Learning about the Different Types 7. Streams - Understanding Streams and Non-Blocking I/O 8. Data Formats - Looking at Different Data Types Other Than JSON 9. Practical Example - Building a Static Server 10. Workers - Learning about Dedicated and Shared Workers 11. Service Workers - Caching and Making Things Faster 12. Building and Deploying a Full Web Application 13. WebAssembly - A Brief Look into Native Code on the Web 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Practical Example - A Look at Svelte and Being Vanilla

Since the past few chapters took a look at the modern web and the APIs available to us, we are now going to take a practical example of those same APIs in action. There has been quite a bit of development in web frameworks that create a kind of runtime associated with them. This runtime can be almost all attributed to a Virtual DOM (VDOM) and a state system. When these two things are interconnected, we are able to create rich and reactive frontend. Examples of these frameworks are React, Vue, and Angular.

But what happens if we got rid of the VDOM and runtime concept and somehow compiled all of this code down to vanilla JavaScript and web API calls? This is what the creators of the Svelte framework had in mind: to utilize what we have in the browser instead of creating our own version of the browser (this is an obvious oversimplification...

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