Nuremberg, Germany: The Open Web Learning Institute at Webmasters Akademie Nürnberg GmbH, 2018. — 473 p. — ISBN: 978-1983138546, 1983138541.
Learning JavaScript in 2018
The non-boring beginner's guide to modern (ES6+) JavaScript programming.
Would you like to learn the latest JavaScript without getting bored by abstract examples? In this »training in a book« you will develop parts of a webshop, mix cocktails with arrays, create background images with recursion and fight the »dark side of JavaScript«.
You won't need any prior knowledge; all you need to get going is a web browser. So just start! Step by step, you will learn the core of the JavaScript language and how to apply it in everyday programming. You will learn how to write JavaScript code that not only works, but that you can be proud of.
The latest, completely revised edition takes into account the most current JavaScript language version. Here's an excerpt from the contents:
From operators, data types and other priorities
Variables or reality in drawers
For all cases... if & else
Functions give us back so much...
One for all and all for one: Arrays
The big arrangement with map, reduce, filter...
Again from the beginning with recursion
That's where I stay strict!
Appetite for Destructuring
OWL Step-by-Step Guides
OWL Step-by-Step Guides convey practical knowledge in a simple and understandable way. They are written based on teaching practice by experts from the renowned Open Web Learning Institute and conceived in such a way that you can put your own projects into practice. Knowledge tests and exercises serve to deepen and consolidate the newly acquired know-how.
This OWL Step-by-Step Guide is part of the online course "JavaScript" at OWL Institute but can also be used independently of the course. The online course offers additional benefits such as personal support, quizzes, assignments and and a final exam including an official certification. Check out https://owl.institute for additional information.
Marco Emrich holds a university degree in computer science, is a passionate trainer and advocate of the software craftsmanship
movement. He has wide experience as a software architect and developer in a variety of sectors. Marco heads the Web Engineering
department of the Webmasters Akademie in Nuremberg, Germany. He also lectures regularly, holds workshops at leading software
conferences and writes articles for technical journals. In his spare time, if he's not organizing meetings of the Softwerkskammer software
craftsmanship community, you'll probably find Marco teaching his son how to program robot turtles.
Christin Marit is a graduate social pedagogue with a multidisciplinary professional background. As an online-development specialist she has focussed on content-marketing and webdesign and has published extensively on these subjects in the role of teacher. She is purpose driven and a sharp analyst always aiming to blend her passion for photography and creative writing with her professional activities.