JavaScript
todo; sort this mess
General
1995
Learning
- A Survey of the JavaScript Programming Language - This document is an introduction to the JavaScript Programming Language for professional programmers. It is a small language, so if you are familiar with other languages, then this won't be too demanding. Douglas Crockford, 2002
- JavaScript Quiz is meant for recruiters to present to front-end developer candidates. The intent is to weed out some "Just use jQuery" applicants, but allow those that know JavaScript to pass fairly easily.
- http://humanjavascript.com/ - sounds like it'll be good
Online courses
- Codecademy: Javascript- In this track you will get started programming with the basic concepts of Javascript like variables, functions, loops, and conditionals. These concepts are shared across programming languages, so you will be able to bring what you have learned to projects in any language. After finishing this track, you’ll be able to create programs, games, and have a foundation for learning JavaScript frameworks.
Screencasts
- TheCodePlayer - Learn HTML5, CSS3, Javascript and more. Video style walkthroughs showing cool stuff being created from scratch.
- http://cssdeck.com/codecasts
Books
- Eloquent JavaScript - A Modern Introduction to Programming
- http://jsforcats.com/
- https://leanpub.com/javascript-allonge/read
- JSbooks - The best free JavaScript resources
Videos
- The JavaScript Trilogy by Douglas Crockford
- Crockford on JavaScript - Volume 1: The Early Years
- Crockford on JavaScript - Chapter 2: And Then There Was JavaScript
- Crockford on JavaScript - Act III: Function the Ultimate
- Crockford on JavaScript - Episode IV: The Metamorphosis of Ajax
- Crockford on JavaScript - Part 5: The End of All Things
- Crockford on JavaScript - Scene 6: Loopage
- Crockford on JavaScript - Level 7: ECMAScript 5: The New Parts
- Crockford on JavaScript - Section 8: Programming Style & Your Brain
- Douglas Crockford: The Better Parts - JSConfUY 2014
Articles
- DailyJS
- Badass JavaScript
- Echo JS - social bookmark news
- Basic JavaScript - elegantcode.com, 12 parts
- jQuery and JavaScript Coding: Examples and Best Practices - September 16th, 2008
- Preparing Yourself for Modern JavaScript Development - July 6th, 2012
Games
Specs
ECMAScript 5
- ECMAScript 5.1 - aka ECMA-262 - HTML version
- Annotated ECMAScript 5.1
- Wikipedia:ECMAScript
- ECMAScript wiki - for the ongoing specification work of Ecma TC39, the technical committee tasked with standardization of the ECMAScript programming language. Most of the wiki is world-readable, meaning that anyone can view the pages. Certain sections are restricted to members of the technical committee.
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Functions_and_function_scope/Strict_mode
- http://www.yuiblog.com/blog/2010/12/14/strict-mode-is-coming-to-town/
ECMAScript 6
- http://addyosmani.com/blog/a-few-new-things-coming-to-javascript/
- http://addyosmani.com/blog/ecmascript-6-resources-for-the-curious-javascripter/
- http://espadrine.github.io/New-In-A-Spec/es6/
- https://github.com/google/traceur-compiler - a JavaScript.next-to-JavaScript-of-today compiler that allows you to use features from the future today. Traceur supports ES6 as well as some experimental ES.next features.
CommonJS
- CommonJS - JavaScript spec does not define a standard library that is useful for building a broader range of applications. The CommonJS API will fill that gap by defining APIs that handle many common application needs, ultimately providing a standard library as rich as those of Python, Ruby and Java. The intention is that an application developer will be able to write an application using the CommonJS APIs and then run that application across different JavaScript interpreters and host environments.
- Wikipedia:CommonJS - is a project with the goal of specifying an ecosystem for JavaScript outside the browser (for example, on the server or for native desktop applications).
WebAPI
Development
- stackoverflow: Is Javascript a Functional Programming Language?
- http://docstore.mik.ua/orelly/web/jscript/ch09_03.html
- http://omniti.com/seeds/javascript-tips-for-non-specialists
Code formatting
- Superhero.js - Creating, testing and maintaining a large JavaScript code base is not easy — especially since great resources on how to do this are hard to find. This page is a collection of the best articles, videos and presentations we've found on the topic.
- JavaScript The Right Way - An easy-to-read, quick reference for JS best practices, accepted coding standards, and links around the Web]
- idiomatic.js - Principles of Writing Consistent, Idiomatic JavaScript. This is a living document and new ideas for improving the code around us are always welcome. Contribute: fork, clone, branch, commit, push, pull request.
Documentation
- JsDoc Toolkit is an application, written in JavaScript, for automatically generating template-formatted, multi-page HTML (or XML, JSON, or any other text-based) documentation from commented JavaScript source code.
Syntax
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/440739/what-do-parentheses-surrounding-a-javascript-object-function-class-declaration-m
- http://peter.michaux.ca/articles/javascript-namespacing
- https://github.com/alcuadrado/hieroglyphy - Transform any javascript code to an equivalent sequence of ()[]{}!+ characters that runs in the browser! obfuscation
Comments
// this is a comment
/* this is a multiline comment */
Operators
= assignment
== equivalency comparison === strictly equak with no type conversion
condition ? expr1 : expr2
typeof returns string indicating the type of unevaluated operand
Statements
varname1 = 42 declare a global and local variable with the value 42. not strict mode compliant! var test123 declare variable without value, i.e., 'undefined' const newtest321 = 666 declare an immutable variable
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Scope_Cheatsheet - "Every definition of a variable is really a declaration of the variable at the top of its scope and an assignment at the place where the definition is."
if...else
if (condition1) statement1 else if (condition2) statement2 else if (condition3) statement3 ... else statementN
loop
for
for ([initialExpression]; [condition]; [incrementExpression]) statement
for (i=0; i<=101; i++) { doThis(); }
for...in
for (variable in object) { statements }
for (x in arrayThing.length) { soemthing; }
for...of
for (variable of object) statement
while
while (condition) statement
var i = 100; while (i>0) { something; i=i-1; }
do...while
Guaranteed to run once.
do statement while (condition);
var i = 0; do { i=i+1; smoething; } while (i<10)
break
Stop a loop.
break;
try...catch
Variables, values, objects, literals, functions
- MDN: Values, variables, and literals
- Microsoft: Data Types (JavaScript)
var varname1 [= value1 [, varname2 [, varname3 ... [, varnameN]]]]; defines a local variable, optionally initializing it to a value.
Null
Undefined
Booleans
Strings
var sentence = "This is a sentence"; var sentence = new String("This is a sentence");
A newline character is written like \"\\n\".
var test = "Dave said \"I\'m testing \& stuff\" to Phil."
var x = 'some string'; alert(x.charAt(0)); // alerts 's' alert(x.substring(0,1)); var my_car="Cat"; var where_is_a=my_car.indexOf('a'); alert('The a is at position '+where_is_a+'.');
var where_is_mytool="home/mytool/mytool.cgi"; var mytool_array=where_is_mytool.split("/"); alert(mytool_array[0]+" "+mytool_array[1]+" "+mytool_array[2]);
String.length string length
String.charAt Returns the specified character from a string.
String.indexOf(searchValue[, fromIndex]) where searchValue is in string String.lastIndexOf(searchValue[, fromIndex]) String.substring Returns a subset of a string between one index and another, or through the end of the string. String.split([separator][, limit]) split a String object into an array of strings by separating the string into substrings.
Numbers
Objects
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Guide/Predefined_Core_Objects
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/JavaScript/Guide/Working_with_Objects
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Introduction_to_Object-Oriented_JavaScript
- http://jsperf.com/object-create-vs-crockford-vs-jorge-vs-constructor/40
- http://raganwald.com/2014/01/19/prototypes-are-not-classes.html
members
Object.keys
- Private Members in JavaScript - Douglas Crockford
this
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/this
- http://henrycode.tumblr.com/post/37627169791/javascript-clarifying-the-keyword-this
inheritance
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Guide/Details_of_the_object_model
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Differential_inheritance_in_JavaScript
Douglas Crockford;
- Classical Inheritance in JavaScript
- Prototypal Inheritance in JavaScript
- JavaScript, We Hardly new Ya
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/JavaScript/Guide/Inheritance_and_the_prototype_chain
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/JavaScript/Guide/Inheritance_Revisited
Object.GetPrototypeOf(object) Returns the prototype (i.e. the internal Prototype) of the specified object.
- Understanding JavaScript OOP - prototypical inheritance on awesomeness!
- http://javascriptweblog.wordpress.com/2010/06/07/understanding-javascript-prototypes/
- JS Objects: Inherited a Mess
object literal
var o = {}; var myObject = { sProp: 'some string value', numProp: 2, bProp: false };
see example;
Object.prototype Represents the Object prototype object.
constructor
new constructor[([arguments])] creates an instance of a user-defined object type or of one of the built-in object types that has a constructor function.
var o = new Object();
function UserObject(newUserName,newUserUID) { // Property members this.userName = newUserName; this.userTitle = "Newbie"; this.userUID = 0; // Method member created using prototype UserObject.prototype.notify = function() { alert("Username is " + this.userName + " and UID is " + this.UID); } } var user1 = new UserObject("Milk", 4); user1.notify;
Object.constructor Returns a reference to the Object function that created the instance's prototype.
function Tree(name) { this.name = name; } var theTree = new Tree("Redwood"); console.log( "theTree.constructor is " + theTree.constructor ); // the above example displays the following output: theTree.constructor is function Tree(name) { this.name = name; }
function Constructor(...) { this.membername = value; } Constructor.prototype.membername = value;
Object.create
Object.create(proto [, propertiesObject ]) Creates a new object with the specified prototype object and properties.
var o; // create an object with null as prototype o = Object.create(null); o = {}; // is equivalent to: o = Object.create(Object.prototype);
var a = {a: 1}; // a ---> Object.prototype ---> null var b = Object.create(a); // b ---> a ---> Object.prototype ---> null console.log(b.a); // 1 (inherited) var c = Object.create(b); // c ---> b ---> a ---> Object.prototype ---> null var d = Object.create(null); // d ---> null console.log(d.hasOwnProperty); // undefined, because d doesn't inherit from Object.prototype
Classes
Functions
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Guide/Functions
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Functions_and_function_scope
- http://www.hunlock.com/blogs/Functional_Javascript
- http://helephant.com/2008/08/19/functions-are-first-class-objects-in-javascript/
- http://doctrina.org/Javascript-Function-Invocation-Patterns.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediately-invoked_function_expression - aka self-executing anonymous function
- YouTube - Crockford on JavaScript - Act III: Function the Ultimate
- jQuery Combinators - jQuery’s famous “fluent programming” style is built on the ideas of combinatorial logic. In this session, we’ll explore some combinatorial logic and see how to apply it to making jQuery programs easier to read and write. from Øredev Conference
- Javascript function declarations vs function operators
- Function Smackdown: Function Statement vs. Function Expression
- Named function expressions demystified
function statement declares a function that is named and hoisted.
testFunction(milk,5); function testFuncton(passedName,passednumber) { document.write("Hello" + passedVariableName); return passednumber *3; }
function operator defines a (usually anonymous) function inside an expression.
var x = function(y) { return y * y; };
Function constructor creates a function using the Function object.
var multiply = new Function("x", "y", "return x * y;");
Optional arguments using conditional operator;
optionalArg = (typeof optionalArg === "undefined") ? "defaultValue" : optionalArg;
Invocation
fun.call(thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]]) Calls a function with a given this value and arguments provided individually.
es5;
// this: hello("world") // desugars to: hello.call(undefined, "world");
fun.apply(thisArg[, argsArray]) Calls a function with a given this value and arguments provided as an array (or an array like object). fun.bind(thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]]) Creates a new function that, when called, has its this keyword set to the provided value, with a given sequence of arguments preceding any provided when the new function is called.
Callbacks
- https://github.com/maxogden/art-of-node#callbacks
- http://callbackhell.com/
- http://andrewkelley.me/post/js-callback-organization.html
- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6257379
function someAction(x, y, someCallback) { return someCallback(x, y); } monad function calcProduct(x, y) { return x * y; } function calcSum(x, y) { return x + y; } // alerts 75, the product of 5 and 15 alert(someAction(5, 15, calcProduct)); // alerts 20, the sum of 5 and 15 alert(someAction(5, 15, calcSum));
Closures
- http://www.i-programmer.info/programming/javascript/1031-javascript-jems-lambda-expressions.html
- http://www.paulfree.com/11/javascript-lambda-expressions/
Anonymous
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5815757/what-exactly-is-the-point-of-this-function-construct-why-is-it-needed
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12930272/javascript-closures-vs-anonymous-functions
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediately-invoked_function_expression - or IIFE, pronounced "iffy")[1] is a JavaScript programming language idiom which produces a lexical scope using JavaScript's function scoping. Immediately-invoked function expressions can be used to avoid variable hoisting from within blocks, protect against polluting the global environment and simultaneously allow public access to methods while retaining privacy for variables defined within the function. This concept has been referred to as a self-executing anonymous function,[2] but Ben Alman introduced the term IIFE as a more semantically accurate term for the idiom, shortly after its discussion arose on comp.lang.javascript.
Monads
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkZFtimgAcM - crockford
Arrays
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/874205/what-is-the-difference-between-an-array-and-an-object
- http://andrewdupont.net/2006/05/18/javascript-associative-arrays-considered-harmful/
- http://blog.mikota.cz/2013/06/fun-with-javascript-arrays.html
var names = new Array(); names[0] = "Milk"; ...
var ages = new Array(24,25,33,45,62)
Array.length Array.push Array.sort Array.reverse Array.indexOf Returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present. Array.slice(begin[, end]) Returns a shallow copy of a portion of an array. Array.join(separator) convert array to string Array.forEach(callback[, thisArg]) Executes a provided function once per array element. Array.reduce(callback[, initialValue)]
Date
Date.getDate Returns the day of the month (1-31) for the specified date according to local time.
Date.toString Date.toLocaleDateString Date.toUTCString Date.toLocaleString Date.toISOString
RegExp
Math
Math.round(x)
Math.max
Math.random()
XMLHttpRequest
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/XMLHttpRequest
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMLHttpRequest
onreadystatechange;
0 UNSENT open()has not been called yet. 1 OPENED send()has not been called yet. 2 HEADERS_RECEIVED send() has been called, and headers and status are available. 3 LOADING Downloading; responseText holds partial data. 4 DONE The operation is complete.
open method;
void open( DOMString method, DOMString url, optional boolean async, optional DOMString user, optional DOMString password );
var myRequest = new XMLHttpRequest(); myRequest.onreadystatechange = function() { if myRequest.readyState == 4 { alert(myRequest.responseText); } } myRequest.open("GET", "http://example.com",true); myRequest.send
Data types
- http://docs.jquery.com/Types
- http://closure-library.googlecode.com/svn/docs/closure_goog_array_array.js.html
- http://closure-library.googlecode.com/svn/docs/namespace_goog_structs.html
- https://github.com/silentmatt/javascript-biginteger
- http://oli.me.uk/2013/07/12/tuples-in-javascript/ [9]
- https://github.com/mauriciosantos/buckets
- http://jsclass.jcoglan.com/
- http://code.stephenmorley.org/javascript/queues/
- http://code.google.com/p/jshashtable/
- https://github.com/transcriptic/quantify
- https://github.com/swannodette/mori
Patterns
- Learning JavaScript Design Patterns - A book by Addy Osmani
- JavaScript Programming Patterns
- http://shichuan.github.com/javascript-patterns/
Combinators
.extend
Delegation
Generators
Promises
DOM
- HTML5: Web application APIs
- DOM Scripting Task Force - An autonomous working group of the Web Standards Project. Our mission is to bring scripting up to parity with XHTML and CSS as a useful and necessary tool for building accessible, user-centric, standards-based web sites.
- HTML5 Live DOM Viewer
- HTML5 Live DOM Viewer—Now in Your Browser - August 14th, 2008
- DOM Enlightenment - Exploring the relationship between JavaScript and the modern HTML DOM
- Replacing text in the DOM… solved? - July 3rd, 2012
Chrome Developer Tools;
window in console to see DOM tree, or set breakpoint for first line
Guides
- MDN: DOM
- Gecko DOM Reference - MDN
- http://javascriptisawesome.blogspot.nl/2011/07/faster-than-jquerydocumentready-wait.html
- https://medium.com/the-javascript-collection/ce3645cca083
Interfaces
window
window.alert(message); Displays a popup box with text and OK button result = window.confirm(message); Displays a popup box with text and OK and cancel buttons which return true and false. result = window.prompt(text[, value]); Displays a dialog with a message prompting the user to input some text.
var windowObjectReference = window.open(strUrl, strWindowName[, strWindowFeatures]);
window.scrollY aka window.pageYOffset returns the number of pixels that the document has already been scrolled vertically. window.scrollX
window.innerHeight window.innerWidth
window.status = string; var value = window.status; set the windows statusbar text
window.getComputedStyle
timers
window.setInterval Calls a function or executes a code snippet repeatedly, with a fixed time delay between each call to that function. window.clearInterval(intervalID) Clear setInterval timer
window.setTimeout Calls a function after a specified delay window.clearTimeout Clears setTimeout timer
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Timers
- http://clarkeulmer.com/handling-multiple-timers-with-javascripts-setinterval-and-jquery/
- http://javascript.info/tutorial/events-and-timing-depth
- http://javascript.info/tutorial/settimeout-setinterval
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3969475/javascript-pause-settimeout
history
window.history
location
window.location window.location.hash
window.navigator Returns a reference to the navigator object, which can be queried for information about the application running the script. window.navigator.appName "Netscape", etc.
nodes
var dupNode = node.cloneNode(deep);
Node.appendChild
document
document.styleSheets Returns a list of stylesheet objects for stylesheets explicitly linked into or embedded in a document.
document.readyState
document.write add text to document document.writeln add text to document with new line
document.getElementsByTagName('body') document.getElementById('yourid').style.backgroundColor = "#f3f3f3"; document.getElementsByClassName('body')
document.URL get not set address
var element = document.createElement(tagName); var text = document.createTextNode(data);
elements
document.createElement
element.id gets or sets the element's identifier (attribute id). element.classList returns a token list of the class attribute of the element. element.className gets and sets the value of the class attribute of the specified element.
element.innerHTML sets or gets the HTML syntax describing the element's descendants.
element.clientHeight returns the inner height of an element in pixels, including padding but not the horizontal scrollbar height, border, or margin. element.offsetParent reference to the object which is the closest (nearest in the containment hierarchy) positioned containing element. element.offsetHeight height of an element relative to the element's offsetParent. element.scrollTop scrollTop gets or sets the number of pixels that the content of an element is scrolled upward.
element.onclick = functionRef; The onclick property returns the onClick event handler code on the current element. element.onblur = function;
console
console.log Outputs a message to the Web Console. console.info Outputs an informational message to the Web Console. In Firefox, a small "i" icon is displayed next to these items in the Web Console's log.
Events
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Event
- http://www.quirksmode.org/js/events_order.html
onload finishes loading a window or all frames within a FRAMESET. BODY and FRAMESET onunload when the user agent removes a document from a window or frame. BODY and FRAMESET onclick when the pointing device button is clicked over an element ondblclick when the pointing device button is double clicked over an element onmousedown when the pointing device button is pressed over an element onmouseup when the pointing device button is released over an element onmouseover when the pointing device is moved onto an element onmousemove when the pointing device is moved while it is over an element onmouseout when the pointing device is moved away from an element onfocus when an element receives focus either by the pointing device or by tabbing navigation. A, AREA, LABEL, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA, and BUTTON. onblur when an element loses focus either by the pointing device or by tabbing navigation. onkeypress when a key is pressed and released over an element onkeydown when a key is pressed down over an element onkeyup when a key is released over an element onsubmit when a form is submitted. It only applies to the FORM element. onreset when a form is reset. It only applies to the FORM element. onselect when a user selects some text in a text field. This attribute may be used with the INPUT and TEXTAREA elements. onchange when a control loses the input focus and its value has been modified since gaining focus. This attribute applies to the following elements: INPUT, SELECT, and TEXTAREA.
- http://javascript.about.com/od/hintsandtips/a/nodocwrite.htm
- http://benv.ca/2012/10/4/you-are-probably-misusing-DOM-text-methods/
Templating
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javascript_templating
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript_templates
- Template-Engine-Chooser!
- Architect - Edit Javascript templates in various engines
- NetTuts: Best Practices When Working With JavaScript Templates
- LinkedIn: The client-side templating throwdown: mustache, handlebars, dust.js, and more
Data binding
Drag and Drop
Forms
Media
Firefox
Cookies
document.cookie = cookieName + "=" + excape(cookieValue) + ";expires=" + expirationDate.toUTCString();
if(document.cookie.length > 0) // true if cookie present // then check specific cookie name cookieValueStart = document.cookie.indexOf("="); document.cookie.substring(cookieValueStart +1);
document.cookie = cookieName + "=; expires =Thu, 01-Jan-70 00:00:01 GTM";
Security
non strict mode;
- ADsafe makes it safe to put guest code (such as third party scripted advertising or widgets) on a web page. ADsafe defines a subset of JavaScript that is powerful enough to allow guest code to perform valuable interactions, while at the same time preventing malicious or accidental damage or intrusion. The ADsafe subset can be verified mechanically by tools like JSLint so that no human inspection is necessary to review guest code for safety. The ADsafe subset also enforces good coding practices, increasing the likelihood that guest code will run correctly.
- Caja Compiler is a tool for making third party HTML, CSS and JavaScript safe to embed in your website. It enables rich interaction between the embedding page and the embedded applications. Caja uses an object-capability security model to allow for a wide range of flexible security policies, so that your website can effectively control what embedded third party code can do with user data.
Modules
- http://addyosmani.com/resources/essentialjsdesignpatterns/book/#modulepatternjavascript
- http://www.impressivewebs.com/my-current-javascript-design-pattern/
- http://css-tricks.com/how-do-you-structure-javascript-the-module-pattern-edition/
AMD
- RequireJS is a JavaScript file and module loader. It is optimized for in-browser use, but it can be used in other JavaScript environments, like Rhino and Node. Using a modular script loader like RequireJS will improve the speed and quality of your code.
"AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order" and something that was easy to use directly in the browser. Something with good debugging characteristics that did not require server-specific tooling to get started. It grew out of Dojo's real world experience with using XHR+eval and and wanting to avoid its weaknesses for the future."
- Using AMD loaders to write and manage modular javascript
- Writing Modular JavaScript With AMD, CommonJS & ES Harmony
ES6
UMD
Loading
<script type="text/javascript"> document.write("Hello world!"); </script>
<script src="javascript/project.js"></script>
Async
Offline
Compilers
Engines
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Rhino_documentation
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhino_(JavaScript_engine)
Dialects
- altJS - One web, many languages. We catalog a range of projects that use the JavaScript/ECMAScript platform to bring language diversity, scientific research opportunities, and choice to the web: Compile-to-JavaScript languages (altJS), JavaScript enhancements (security, static typing), Ports of existing languages (Java, C, Ruby, etc.), Tools for compiler writers
CofeeScript
- CoffeeScript is a programming language that transcompiles to JavaScript. The language adds syntactic sugar inspired by Ruby, Python and Haskell to enhance JavaScript's brevity and readability, and add more sophisticated features like list comprehension and pattern matching.
- IcedCoffeeScript is a superset of CoffeeScript. The iced interpreter is a drop-in replacement for the standard coffee interpreter; it will interpret almost all existing CoffeeScript programs.
Coco
- Coco is a CoffeeScript dialect that aims to be more radical and practical. On its way to hide JavaScript's bad parts, CoffeeScript has accumulated own quirks: horrible variable scope, awkward ranges, confusing and/or pointless keywords, verbose file extension, and so on. Coco tries to amend them, entwining good parts of both.
LiveScript
- LiveScript is Coco but much more compatible with CoffeeScript, more functional, allows you to write expressive code devoid of repetitive boilerplate. While adding features to assist in functional style programming, LiveScript also deeply supports imperative and object oriented programming, and has an optional class system with inheritance, calls to super, and more.
Kal
Narrative JS
LLJS
- LLJS is a typed dialect of JavaScript that offers a C-like type system with manual memory management. It compiles to JavaScript and lets you write memory-efficient and GC pause-free code less painfully, in short, LLJS is the bastard child of JavaScript and C. LLJS is early research prototype work, so don't expect anything rock solid just yet. The research goal here is to explore low-level statically typed features in a high-level dynamically typed language. Think of it as inline assembly in C, or the unsafe keyword in C#. It's not pretty, but it gets the job done.
DubJS
- DubJS is a dialect of JavaScript for making web apps with minimal effort. It comes with a strong core framework, and is designed for building any kind of web app, whether it be an entirely dynamic single-page app, a pre-generated static site,1 or something in between. It's focus is client-side development, and as such can be used in combination with your favourite server-side tools.
LispyScript
- LispyScript - A javascript With Lispy Syntax And Macros! An inherent problem with Javascript is that it has no macro support, unlike other Lisp like languages. That's because macros manipulate the syntax tree while compiling. And this is next to impossible in a language like Javascript. In LispyScript we write Javascript in a tree structure. If you know Javascript and a Lisp like language, then using LispyScript will be a breeze. Even if you don't know a Lispy Language, all you need to learn is to write code in a tree structure.
haxe JS
- haxe JS is similar to Javascript, but includes new features like: Strong typing, Type inference, Packages, Classes, Interfaces, Generics, Enums, Iterators, Inlining, Macros
Lua
- Colony compiles JavaScript to Lua 5.1 source code, that requires only a small support library. Colony can be used in any Lua application supporting the debug library (enabled in Lua 5.1 by default). Colony is experimental.
- ljs - Lua VM implemented in Javascript
- lua.js - node.js, lua to javascript compiler, nee lua2js-experiment
Tampermonkey
- Tampermonkey is a tool that provides Greasemonkey script support for Google Chrome and Chromium Browser. It's API is fully compatible to Greasemonkey, including GM_registerMenuCommand, GM_xmlhttpRequest with cross domain support and access to the unsafeWindow object.
Continuum
- Continuum is a JavaScript virtual machine built in JavaScript. It assembles bytecode from sourcecode and executes it in an ES6 runtime environment. The code of the VM is written in ES3, which means it can run in browsers as old as IE6 (though currently it's only regularly tested in IE8+ and there's probably some kinks to work out in older IE's).
Wisp
Other
- http://funscript.info/ f# -> js