聚合国内IT技术精华文章,分享IT技术精华,帮助IT从业人士成长

Javascript Overview

2013-08-28 23:31 浏览: 2154705 次 我要评论(0 条) 字号:

Lexical Structure

In JavaScript, identifiers are used to name variables and functions and to provide labels for certain loops in JavaScript code. A JavaScript identifier must begin with a letter, an underscore (_), or a dollar sign ($). Subsequent characters can be letters, digits, underscores, or dollar signs

i
abc
v1
$str

JavaScript allows identifiers to contain letters and digits from the entire Unicode character set.

Like many programming languages, JavaScript uses the semicolon (;) to separate statements from each other. In JavaScript, you can usually omit the semicolon between two statements if those statements are written on separate lines.

Types/Values/Variables

Numbers

Unlike many languages, JavaScript does not make a distinction between integer values and floating-point values. All numbers in JavaScript are represented as floating-point values.

0
3
0xff
3.14

Strings

"hello world"
'hello world'
"Wouldn't you prefer O'Reilly's book?"  

Boolean

true
false

Any JavaScript value can be converted to a boolean value. The following values convert to, and therefore work like, false:

undefined
null
0
-0
NaN
"" // the empty string

null/undefined

null is a language keyword that evaluates to a special value that is usually used to indicate the absence of a value. Using the typeof operator on null returns the string “object”, indicating that null can be thought of as a special object value that indicates “no object”.

Objects

JavaScript objects are composite values: they are a collection of properties or named values.

var s = "hello world!"; // A string
var word = s.substring(s.indexOf(" ")+1, s.length);
var obj = {
    propName1: 123,
    propName2: "abc"
};
obj.propName1 = 456;
obj["propName1"] = 456; // same as previous statement

Arrays

Arrays are a specialized kind of object. JavaScript arrays are untyped: an array element may be of any type, and different elements of the same array may be of different types.

var empty = []; // An array with no elements
var primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11]; // An array with 5 numeric elements
var misc = [ 1.1, true, "a", ]; // 3 elements of various types + trailing comma

Another way to create an array is with the Array() constructor:

var a = new Array();
var a = new Array(10);
var a = new Array(5, 4, 3, 2, 1, "testing, testing");

Functions

Functions designed to initialize a newly created object are called constructors. In JavaScript, functions are objects. JavaScript can assign functions to variables and pass them to other functions. JavaScript function definitions can be nested within other functions.

function printprops(o) {
    for(var p in o)
    console.log(p + ": " + o[p] + "n");
}
var square = function(x) { return x*x; }

function hypotenuse(a, b) {
    function square(x) { return x*x; }
    return Math.sqrt(square(a) + square(b));
}

Expressions/Operators

Object and Array initializers

var p = { x:2.3, y:-1.2 }; // An object with 2 properties
var q = {}; // An empty object with no properties
q.x = 2.3; q.y = -1.2; // Now q has the same properties as p
var matrix = [[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]];

Object creation expression

An object creation expression creates a new object and invokes a function (called a constructor) to initialize the properties of that object.

new Object()
new Point(2,3)

Operators

  • Arithmetic operator
  • Relational operator
  • Logical operator
  • Assignment operator
  • Conditional operator
  • typeof operator
  • delete operator

eval expression

JavaScript has the ability to interpret strings of JavaScript source code, evaluating them to produce a value. JavaScript does this with the global function eval():

eval("3+2") // => 5

Statements

Declaration Statements

The var statement declares a variable or variables. Here’s the syntax:

var name_1 [ = value_1] [ ,..., name_n [= value_n]] 

Conditionals

if (expression)
    statement   
else if (expression)
    statement

switch(expression) {
    statements
}

Loops

while (expression)
    statement

do
    statement
while (expression);

for(initialize ; test ; increment)
    statement

for (variable in object)
    statement

var o = {a:1, b:2};
for(var p in o) // Assign property names of o to variable p
    console.log(o[p]); // Print the value of each property

Other

  • break/break label
  • continue/continue label
  • return
  • throw
  • try/catch/finally
  • with
  • use strict

Objects

An object is more than a simple stringtovalue map, however. In addition to maintaining its own set of properties, a JavaScript object also inherits the properties of another object, known as its “prototype”. The methods of an object are typically inherited properties, and this “prototypal inheritance” is a key feature of JavaScript.

JavaScript objects are dynamic—properties can usually be added and deleted—but they can be used to simulate the static objects and “structs” of statically typed languages.

Objects are mutable and are manipulated by reference rather than by value.

Every JavaScript object has a second JavaScript object (or null, but this is rare) associated with it. This second object is known as a prototype.

Objects created using the new keyword and a constructor invocation use the value of the prototype property of the constructor function as their prototype.

Object.create() creates a new object, using its first argument as the prototype of that object.

var o1 = Object.create({x:1, y:2}); // o1 inherits properties x and y.

If you want to create an ordinary empty object (like the object returned by {} or new Object()), pass Object.prototype:

var o3 = Object.create(Object.prototype); // o3 is like {} or new Object().

The delete operator removes a property from an object:

delete book.author; // The book object now has no author property.
delete book["main title"]; // Now it doesn't have "main title", either.

property getters and setters

Properties defined by getters and setters are sometimes known as accessor properties to distinguish them from data properties that have a simple value.

var p = {
    // x and y are regular read-write data properties.
    x: 1.0,
    y: 1.0,
    // r is a read-write accessor property with getter and setter.
    // Don't forget to put a comma after accessor methods.
    get r() { return Math.sqrt(this.x*this.x + this.y*this.y); },
    set r(newvalue) {
        var oldvalue = Math.sqrt(this.x*this.x + this.y*this.y);
        var ratio = newvalue/oldvalue;
        this.x *= ratio;
        this.y *= ratio;
    },
    // theta is a read-only accessor property with getter only.
    get theta() { return Math.atan2(this.y, this.x); }
};

Functions

In JavaScript, functions may be nested within other functions. For example:

function hypotenuse(a, b) {
    function square(x) { return x*x; }
    return Math.sqrt(square(a) + square(b));
}   

Invoking functions

JavaScript functions can be invoked in four ways:

  • as functions
  • as methods
  • as constructors
  • indirectly through their call() and apply() methods

Optional parameters

// Append the names of the enumerable properties of object o to the
// array a, and return a. If a is omitted, create and return a new array.
function getPropertyNames(o, /* optional */ a) {
    if (a === undefined) a = []; // If undefined, use a new array
    for(var property in o) a.push(property);
    return a;
}
// This function can be invoked with 1 or 2 arguments:
var a = getPropertyNames(o); // Get o's properties into a new array
getPropertyNames(p,a); // append p's properties to that array

Variable-Length Argument Lists: The Arguments Object

function max(/* ... */) {
    var max = Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY;
    // Loop through the arguments, looking for, and remembering, the biggest.
    for(var i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++)
    if (arguments[i] > max) max = arguments[i];
    // Return the biggest
    return max;
}
var largest = max(1, 10, 100, 2, 3, 1000, 4, 5, 10000, 6); // => 10000

In addition to its array elements, the Arguments object defines callee and caller properties.

var factorial = function(x) {
    if (x <= 1) return 1;
    return x * arguments.callee(x-1);
};

Function as values

Functions are not primitive values in JavaScript, but a specialized kind of object, which means that functions can have properties.

// Initialize the counter property of the function object.
// Function declarations are hoisted so we really can
// do this assignment before the function declaration.
uniqueInteger.counter = 0;
// This function returns a different integer each time it is called.
// It uses a property of itself to remember the next value to be returned.
function uniqueInteger() {
    return uniqueInteger.counter++; // Increment and return counter property
}

Closures

Like most modern programming languages, JavaScript uses lexical scoping.

Function bind method

When you invoke the bind() method on a function f and pass an object o, the method returns a new function. Invoking the new function (as a function) invokes the original function f as a method of o. Any arguments you pass to the new function are passed to the original function.

function f(y) { return this.x + y; } // This function needs to be bound
var o = { x : 1 }; // An object we'll bind to
var g = f.bind(o); // Calling g(x) invokes o.f(x)
g(2) // => 3    

The Function() Constructor

Functions are usually defined using the function keyword, either in the form of a function definition statement or a function literal expression. But functions can also be defined with the Function() constructor. For example:

var f = new Function("x", "y", "return x*y;");

Reference



网友评论已有0条评论, 我也要评论

发表评论

*

* (保密)

Ctrl+Enter 快捷回复