53,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

To get the most out of modern JavaScript, you need learn the latest features of its parent specification, ECMAScript 6 (ES6). This book provides a highly practical look at ES6, without getting lost in the specification or its implementation details. Armed with practical examples, author Nicolas Bevacqua shows you new ways to deal with asynchronous flow control, declare objects or functions, and create proxies or unique sets, among many other features. The first title in Bevacqua's Modular JavaScript series, Practical Modern JavaScript prepares JavaScript and Node.js developers for applied…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
To get the most out of modern JavaScript, you need learn the latest features of its parent specification, ECMAScript 6 (ES6). This book provides a highly practical look at ES6, without getting lost in the specification or its implementation details. Armed with practical examples, author Nicolas Bevacqua shows you new ways to deal with asynchronous flow control, declare objects or functions, and create proxies or unique sets, among many other features. The first title in Bevacqua's Modular JavaScript series, Practical Modern JavaScript prepares JavaScript and Node.js developers for applied lessons in modular design, testing, and deployment in subsequent books. This book explains: * How JavaScript and its standards development process have evolved * Essential ES6 changes, including arrow functions, destructuring, let and const * Class syntax for declaring object prototypes, and the new Symbol primitive * How to handle flow control with Promises, iterators, generators, and async functions * ES6 collection built-in types for creating object maps and unique sets * How and when to use the new Proxy and Reflect built-ins * Changes to Array, Math, numbers, strings, Unicode, and regular expressions, and other improvements since ES5
Autorenporträt
Nico is an enthusiastic JavaScript consultant based in Buenos Aires, Argentina. When he's not working on consulting projects or contributing to the open-source community as @bevacqua, Nico devotes his time to the local NodeSchool and Beer.js communities. Nico loves writing content for ponyfoo.com, his blog since 2012. He's published a book on JavaScript processes and quality named JavaScript Application Design (Manning). Nico is a happy pony, and you can find him as @nzgb on Twitter.