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JavaScript

JavaScript. Language Fundamentals. About JavaScript. JavaScript is not Java, or even related to Java The original name for JavaScript was “ LiveScript ” The name was changed when Java became popular

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JavaScript

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  1. JavaScript Language Fundamentals

  2. About JavaScript • JavaScript is not Java, or even related to Java • The original name for JavaScript was “LiveScript” • The name was changed when Java became popular • Now that Microsoft no longer likes Java, its name for their JavaScript dialect is “Active Script” • Statements in JavaScript resemble statements in Java, because both languages borrowed heavily from the C language • JavaScript should be fairly easy for Java programmers to learn • However, JavaScript is a complete, full-featured, complex language • JavaScript is reasonably platform-independent

  3. Using JavaScript in a browser • JavaScript code is included within <script> tags: • <script type="text/javascript"> document.write("<h1>Hello World!</h1>") ;</script> • Notes: • The type attribute is to allow you to use other scripting languages (but JavaScript is the default) • This simple code does the same thing as just putting <h1>HelloWorld!</h1>in the same place in the HTML document • The semicolon at the end of the JavaScript statement is optional • You need semicolons if you put two or more statements on the same line • It’s probably a good idea to keep using semicolons

  4. JavaScript isn’t always available • Some old browsers do not recognize script tags • These browsers will ignore the script tags but will display the included JavaScript • To get old browsers to ignore the whole thing, use:<script type="text/javascript"> <!--document.write("Hello World!") //--></script> • The <!-- introduces an HTML comment • To get JavaScript to ignore the HTML close comment, -->, the//starts a JavaScript comment, which extends to the end of the line • Some users turn off JavaScript • Use the <noscript>message</noscript> to display a message in place of whatever the JavaScript would put there

  5. Where to put JavaScript • JavaScript can be put in the<head>or in the <body>of an HTML document • JavaScript functions should be defined in the<head> • This ensures that the function is loaded before it is needed • JavaScript in the<body>will be executed as the page loads • JavaScript can be put in a separate.jsfile • <script src="myJavaScriptFile.js"></script> • Put this HTML wherever you would put the actual JavaScript code • An external.jsfile lets you use the same JavaScript on multiple HTML pages • The external.jsfile cannot itself contain a<script>tag • JavaScript can be put in an HTML form object, such as a button • This JavaScript will be executed when the form object is used

  6. Primitive data types • JavaScript has three “primitive” types: number, string, and boolean • Everything else is an object • Numbers are always stored as floating-point values • Hexadecimal numbers begin with 0x • Some platforms treat 0123 as octal, others treat it as decimal • Since you can’t be sure, avoid octal altogether! • Strings may be enclosed in single quotes or double quotes • Strings can contain \n (newline), \" (double quote), etc. • Booleans are either true or false • 0,"0", empty strings,undefined,null, andNaNarefalse, other values are true

  7. Variables • Variables are declared with a var statement: • var pi = 3.1416, x, y, name = "Dr. Dave" ; • Variables names must begin with a letter or underscore • Variable names are case-sensitive • Variables are untyped (they can hold values of any type) • The word var is optional (but it’s good style to use it) • Variables declared within a function are local to that function (accessible only within that function) • local variables must be declared using var • Variables declared outside a function are global (accessible from anywhere on the page)

  8. Operators, I • Most JavaScript syntax is borrowed from C • Arithmetic operators (all numbers are floating-point):+ - * / % ++ -- • Comparison operators: < <= == != >= > • Logical operators: && || ! (&&and ||are short-circuit operators) • Bitwise operators: & | ^ ~ << >> >>> • Assignment operators:+= -= *= /= %= <<= >>= >>>= &= ^= |=

  9. Operators, II • String operator:+ • The conditional operator:condition ? value_if_true : value_if_false • Special equality tests: • ==and!=try to convert their operands to the same type before performing the test • ===and!==consider their operands unequal if they are of different types • Additional operators new typeof void delete

  10. Comments • Comments are as in C++ or Java: • Between//and the end of the line • Between/*and*/ • Java’s javadoc comments,/** ... */, are treated just the same as/* ... */comments; they have no special meaning in JavaScript

  11. Statements, I • Most JavaScript statements are also borrowed from C • Assignment: greeting = "Hello, " + name; • Compound statement:{ statement; ...; statement } • If statements:if (condition) statement; if (condition) statement; else statement; • Familiar loop statements:while (condition) statement; do statementwhile (condition); for (initialization; condition;increment) statement;

  12. Statements, II • The switch statement: switch (expression) { case label :statement; break; case label :statement; break; ... default : statement; } • Other familiar statements: • break; • continue; • The empty statement, as in;;or{ }

  13. Exception handling, I • Exception handling in JavaScript is almost the same as in Java • throwexpression creates and throws an exception • The expression is the value of the exception, and can be of any type (often, it's a literal String) • try {statements to try} catch (e) { // Notice: no type declaration foreexception handling statements} finally { // optional, as usualcode that is always executed} • With this form, there is only onecatch clause

  14. Exception handling, II • try {statements to try} catch (e if test1) { exception handling for the case that test1 is true} catch (e if test2) { exception handling for when test1 is false and test2 is true} catch (e) { exception handling for when both test1and test2 are false} finally { // optional, as usualcode that is always executed} • Typically, the test would be something likee == "InvalidNameException"

  15. JavaScript is not Java • By now you should have realized that you already know a great deal of JavaScript • JavaScript has some features that resemble features in Java: • JavaScript has Objects and primitive data types • JavaScript has qualified names; for example, document.write("Hello World"); • JavaScript has Events and event handlers • Exception handling in JavaScript is almost the same as in Java • JavaScript has some features unlike anything in Java: • Variable names are untyped: the type of a variable depends on the value it is currently holding • Objects and arrays are defined in quite a different way • JavaScript has with statements and a new kind of for statement

  16. Object literals • You don’t declare the types of variables in JavaScript • JavaScript has object literals, written with this syntax: • { name1 : value1 , ... , nameN : valueN } • Example (from Netscape’s documentation): • car = {myCar: "Saturn", 7: "Mazda", getCar: CarTypes("Honda"), special: Sales} • The fields are myCar, getCar, 7(this is a legal field name) , and special • "Saturn" and "Mazda" are Strings • CarTypesis a function call • Sales is a variable you defined earlier • Example use: document.write("I own a " + car.myCar); • Really just Key-Value pairs

  17. Three ways to create an object • You can use an object literal: • var course = { number: "CIT597", teacher: "Dr. Dave" } • You can use new to create a “blank” object, and add fields to it later: • var course = new Object();course.number = "CIT597";course.teacher = "Dr. Dave"; • You can write and use a constructor: • function Course(n, t) { // best placed in <head> this.number = n; // keyword "this" is required, not optional this.teacher = t;} • var course = new Course("CIT597", "Dr. Dave"); • We will talk more about objects later

  18. Array literals • You don’t declare the types of variables in JavaScript • JavaScript has array literals, written with brackets and commas • Example: color = ["red", "yellow", "green", "blue"]; • Arrays are zero-based:color[0]is"red" • If you put two commas in a row, the array has an “empty” element in that location • Example:color = ["red", , , "green", "blue"]; • colorhas 5 elements • However, a single comma at the end is ignored • Example: color = ["red", , , "green", "blue”,]; still has 5 elements

  19. Four ways to create an array • You can use an array literal:var colors = ["red", "green", "blue"]; • You can use new Array()to create an empty array: • var colors = new Array(); • You can add elements to the array later:colors[0] = "red"; colors[2] = "blue"; colors[1]="green"; • You can usenew Array(n)with a single numeric argument to create an array of that size • var colors = new Array(3); • You can usenew Array(…)with two or more arguments to create an array containing those values: • var colors = new Array("red","green", "blue");

  20. The length of an array • IfmyArray is an array, its length is given by myArray.length • Array length can be changed by assignment beyond the current length • Example:var myArray = new Array(5); myArray[10] = 3; • Arrays are sparse, that is, space is only allocated for elements that have been assigned a value • Example: myArray[50000] = 3;is perfectly OK • But indices must be between 0 and 232-1 • As in C and Java, there are no two-dimensional arrays; but you can have an array of arrays: myArray[5][3]

  21. Arrays and objects • Arrays are objects – both are just key-value pairs • car = { myCar: "Saturn", 7: "Mazda" } • car[7]is the same ascar.7 • car.myCaris the same ascar["myCar"] • If you know the name of a property, you can use dot notation: car.myCar • If you don’t know the name of a property, but you have it in a variable (or can compute it), you must use array notation: car["my" + "Car"]

  22. Array functions • If myArray is an array, • myArray.sort()sorts the array alphabetically • myArray.sort(function(a, b) { return a - b; })sorts numerically • myArray.reverse()reverses the array elements • myArray.push(…)adds any number of new elements to the end of the array, and increases the array’s length • myArray.pop()removes and returns the last element of the array, and decrements the array’s length • myArray.toString() returns a string containing the values of the array elements, separated by commas

  23. The for…instatement • You can loop through all the properties of an object with for (variableinobject)statement; • Example: for (var prop in course) { document.write(prop + ": " + course[prop]); } • Possible output: teacher: Dr. Dave number: CIT597 • The properties are accessed in an undefined order • If you add or delete properties of the object within the loop, it is undefined whether the loop will visit those properties • Arrays are objects; applied to an array, for…in will visit the “properties”0, 1, 2, … • Notice that course["teacher"]is equivalent to course.teacher • You must use brackets if the property name is in a variable

  24. Functions • Functions should be defined in the<head>of an HTML page, to ensure that they are loaded first • The syntax for defining a function is:function name(arg1, …, argN) { statements } • The function may contain return value; statements • Any variables declared within the function are local to it • The syntax for calling a function is justname(arg1, …, argN) • Simple parameters are passed by value, objects are passed by reference

  25. Functions function myFunction(a,b) { var ans = a*b; return ans; } x = myFunction(y,z); • Remember no parameter types or return types • If you want to return something, return it • Remember to declare local variables so they are local • Undeclared variables are global • No function overloading

  26. Functions function sayHi() { for(var i=0; i<arguments.length; i++) { alert("Hi, " + arguments[i]) } } sayHi("Cat", "Alice") // 'Hi, Cat', then 'Hi, Alice' Arguments object is available to every function

  27. Functions as arguments • In JavaScript, functions are first-class objects. • Functions can be passed as arguments // display greeting function DisplayGreeting(hourFunc) { // retrieve the hour using the function received as parameter hour = hourFunc(); // display greeting if (hour >= 22 || hour <= 5) document.write("Goodnight, world!"); else document.write("Hello, world!"); } // call DisplayGreeting DisplayGreeting(GetCurrentHour); // returns the current hour function GetCurrentHour() { // obtaining the current hour var date = new Date(); var hour = date.getHours(); // return the hour return hour; }

  28. Anonymous Functions • Can create functions at runtime using the function operator • Often used to pass unamed functions as a parameter var sayHello= function() {   alert(”Hello World!"); } sayHello(); function messageToTheWorld(message, callback) { alert(message); callback(); } messageToTheWorld(“Howdy”, function() { alert(“Doody”); });

  29. Closures • An “inner” function has access to an enclosing functions variables function sayHello2(name)  {    var text = 'Hello ' + name; // local variable    var sayAlert = function() { alert(text); }    return sayAlert; } Returns a function that still has access to the local var text

  30. JavaScript Closure var createGreeting = function(greeting) {     return function(name) {         document.write(greeting + ', ' + name + '.');     }; }; helloGreeting = createGreeting("Hello"); howdyGreeting = createGreeting("Howdy"); helloGreeting("John");  // Hello, John. helloGreeting("Sally"); // Hello, Sally. howdyGreeting("John");  // Howdy, John. howdyGreeting("Sally"); // Howdy, Sally.

  31. Regular expressions • A regular expression can be written in either of two ways: • Within slashes, such asre = /ab+c/ • With a constructor, such as re = new RegExp("ab+c") • Regular expressions are almost the same as in Perl or Java (only a few unusual features are missing) • string.match(regexp) searches stringfor an occurrence of regexp • It returns nullif nothing is found • If regexphas the g (global search) flag set, match returns an array of matched substrings • If gis not set, match returns an array whose 0th element is the matched text, extra elements are the parenthesized subexpressions, and the index property is the start position of the matched substring

  32. Warnings • JavaScript is a big, complex language • We’ve only scratched the surface • It’s easy to get started in JavaScript, but if you need to use it heavily, plan to invest time in learning it well • Write and test your programs a little bit at a time • JavaScript is not totally platform independent • Expect different browsers to behave differently • Write and test your programs a little bit at a time • Browsers aren’t designed to report errors • Don’t expect to get any helpful error messages • Write and test your programs a little bit at a time

  33. Example <html> <head> <title> JavaScript 1 </title> <script language="JavaScript"> document.write("<h1>This is it. </h1>"); document.write(Date()); </script> </head> <body> This is the rest of the page. </body> </html>

  34. Modified example <html> <head> <title> JavaScript 1 </title> <script language="JavaScript"> <!-- var rawDate = Date(); var mon = rawDate.substr(4,3); document.write("The date is"); document.write(rawDate, "<br>") document.write("The month is ", mon); //--> </script> </head> <body> <br> This is the rest of the page. </body> </html>

  35. Using built-in functions, variables <html> <head> <title> JavaScript 1 </title> <script language="JavaScript"> <!-- var rawDate = Date(); var mon = rawDate.substr(4,3); document.write("The month is "); document.write(mon); //--> </script> </head> <body> <br> This is the rest of the page. </body> </html> Variable set to what Date() returns. Extract the month.

  36. Form Verification <body> <h1> Address Information </h1> <br> <form method=post enctype="text/plain" action="mailto:snell@cs.byu.edu" onSubmit="return verify(this);"> First Name: <input type="text" name="fname"> <br> Last Name: <input type="text" name="lname"> <br> Street Address: <input type="text" name="address" size=30> <br> Town/City: <input type="text" name="city"> <br> State: <select name="state" size=1> <br> <option value="NY" selected> Utah <option value="NY" selected> Idaho <option value="NY" selected> New York <option value="NJ"> New Jersey <option value="CT"> Connecticut <option value="PA"> Pennsylvania </select> <br> Status: <input type="radio" name="status" value="R"> Returning client <input type="radio" name="status" value="N"> New client <hr> Thank you <p> <input type="submit" value="Send information"> </form> </body> </html> Javascript Event

  37. Form Verification <html> <head><title>Form example </title> <script language="JavaScript"> function verify(f) { if (f.lname.value == null || f.address.value == null) { alert("Form needs a last name and an address"); return false; } if (f.lname.value == "" || f.address.value == "") { alert("Form needs a last name and an address"); return false; } return true; } </script> </head>

  38. Javscript Events • Events are actions that can be detected by Javascript • Every element on a web page has certain events which can trigger Javascript functions • Often placed within the HTML tag • <tag attribute1 attribute2 onEventName="javascript code;"> • <a href="" onMouseOver="popupFunc();"> • The set of all events which may occur and the page elements on which they can occur is part of the Document Object Model(DOM) not Javascript • Browsers don’t necessarily share the same set of events

  39. Common Javascript Events Event Occurs when... Event Handler • click User clicks on form element or link onClick • change User changes value of text, textarea, or select element onChange • focus User gives form element input focus onFocus • blur User removes input focus from form element onBlur • mouseover User moves mouse pointer over a link or anchor onMouseOver • mouseout User moves mouse pointer off of link or anchor onMouseOut • select User selects form element's input field onSelect • submit User submits a form onSubmit • resize User resizes the browser window onResize • load User loads the page in the Navigator onLoad • unload User exits the page onUnload

  40. The Document Object Model • When a document is loaded in the web browser, a number of objects are created. • Most commonly used are window and document • Window • open(), close(), alert(), confirm(), prompt() • Document • Contains arrays which store all the components of your page • You can access and call methods on the components using the arrays • An object may also be accessed by its name • document.myform.address.value = “123 Main” • document.myform.reset() • Can also search for element by name or id • document.getElementById(“myelementid”) • document.getElementsByName(“myelementname”)

  41. W3C DOM with Javascript • Each xml document also has a DOM • Using Ajax you can get the returned value in xml • XMLfile = request.responseXML • Parse using the DOM methods from the documentElement var rootElement = XMLfile.documentElement; document.write("The root node of the XML file is: "); document.writeln("<b>" + rootElement.nodeName +"</b>"); //traverse through each child of the root element //and print out its name for (i=0; i<rootElement.childNodes.length; i++) { var node = rootElement.childNodes.item(i); document.write("The name of the node is "); document.write("<b>" + node.nodeName + "</b>"); }

  42. The Document Object • Properties • childNodes - returns a NodeList of child nodes • documentElement - returns the root node • documentURI - sets or returns the location of the document • firstChild, lastChild, nodeName, nodeType, nodeValue • Methods • createAttribute, createComment, createElement • getElementById • getElementsByTagName • Return a NodeList of all elements with a specified name

  43. The Document Object • Go to: http://www.w3schools.com/dom/default.asp

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