Javascript Ajax Async

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JavaScript Tutorials - Herong's Tutorial Examples

This book is a collection of tutorial examples and notes written by the author while he was learning JavaScript. Topics include ECMAScript specifications; data types, variables and expressions; flow control statements: 'if', 'for', 'switch', and 'while'; using arrays and objects; defining and calling functions; embedding JavaScript code in HTML documents; DOM (Document Object Model) API levels; using the JavaScript console in Web browsers; creating new object types with prototypes; building prototype inheritance hierarchy; managing functions as objects; using jrunscript JavaScript shell; sending AJAX (XMLHttpRequest) requests. Updated in 2023 (Version 2.33) with AJAX tutorials. For latest updates and free sample chapters, visit https://www.herongyang.com/JavaScript.
Third-Party JavaScript

Summary Third-Party JavaScript guides web developers through the complete development of a full-featured third-party JavaScript application. You'll learn dozens of techniques for developing widgets that collect data for analytics, provide helpful overlays and dialogs, or implement features like chat or commenting. The concepts and examples throughout this book represent the best practices for this emerging field, based on thousands of real-world dev hours and results from millions of users. About this Book There's an art to writing third-party JavaScript—embeddable scripts that can plug into any website. They must adapt easily to unknown host environments, coexist with other applications, and manage the tricky security vulnerabilities you get when code and asset files are served from remote web addresses. Get it right and you have unlimited options for distributing your apps. This unique book shows you how. Third-Party JavaScript guides you through the ins and outs of building full-featured third-party JavaScript applications. You'll learn techniques for developing widgets that collect data for analytics, provide helpful overlays and dialogs, or implement features like chat and commenting. The concepts and examples throughout the book represent the best practices for this emerging field, based on thousands of real-world dev hours and results from millions of users. Written for web developers who know JavaScript, this book requires no prior knowledge of third-party apps. What's Inside Writing conflict-free JavaScript, HTML, and CSS Making cross-domain requests from the browser How to overcome third-party cookie limitations Security vulnerabilities of third-party applications Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications. About the Authors Ben Vinegar is an engineer at Disqus, a third-party JavaScript commenting platform. Anton Kovalyov is a software engineer at Mozilla. They are third-party applications experts whose work has been distributed on millions of websites Table of Contents Introduction to third-party JavaScript Distributing and loading your application Rendering HTML and CSS Communicating with the server Cross-domain iframe messaging Authentication and sessions Security Developing a third-party JavaScript SDK Performance Debugging and testing
You Don't Know JS: Async & Performance

Author: Kyle Simpson
language: en
Publisher: "O'Reilly Media, Inc."
Release Date: 2015-02-23
No matter how much experience you have with JavaScript, odds are you don’t fully understand the language. As part of the "You Don’t Know JS" series, this concise yet in-depth guide focuses on new asynchronous features and performance techniques—including Promises, generators, and Web Workers—that let you create sophisticated single-page web applications and escape callback hell in the process. Like other books in this series, You Don’t Know JS: Async & Performance dives into trickier parts of the language that many JavaScript programmers simply avoid. Armed with this knowledge, you can become a true JavaScript master. With this book you will: Explore old and new JavaScript methods for handling asynchronous programming Understand how callbacks let third parties control your program’s execution Address the "inversion of control" issue with JavaScript Promises Use generators to express async flow in a sequential, synchronous-looking fashion Tackle program-level performance with Web Workers, SIMD, and asm.js Learn valuable resources and techniques for benchmarking and tuning your expressions and statements