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Java Script

This document provides an introduction and overview of JavaScript including: - JavaScript allows making web pages interactive by manipulating the DOM in response to user actions. - It is a client-side scripting language that is interpreted by web browsers to provide dynamic interactivity. - JavaScript code can be placed inline in HTML, in external .js files, or called from event handlers. - The syntax is similar to Java and C# with data types, variables, conditional statements, loops, and functions. - Examples are provided to demonstrate basic JavaScript concepts like displaying alerts, accessing form values, and conditional logic.

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Magarsa Bedasa
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views

Java Script

This document provides an introduction and overview of JavaScript including: - JavaScript allows making web pages interactive by manipulating the DOM in response to user actions. - It is a client-side scripting language that is interpreted by web browsers to provide dynamic interactivity. - JavaScript code can be placed inline in HTML, in external .js files, or called from event handlers. - The syntax is similar to Java and C# with data types, variables, conditional statements, loops, and functions. - Examples are provided to demonstrate basic JavaScript concepts like displaying alerts, accessing form values, and conditional logic.

Uploaded by

Magarsa Bedasa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 63

Chapter 4

Introduction to JavaScript

1
JavaScript
• Introduction
• Language Format
• Data Types and Primitives
• “Hello world” in JavaScript

2
Introduction
• Dynamic HTML (DHTML)
• Makes possible a Web page to react and change in response to the user’s
actions
• DHTML = HTML + CSS + JavaScript

DHTML

HTML CSS JavaScript DOM

3
DTHML = HTML + CSS + JavaScript

• HTML defines Web sites content through semantic tags


(headings, paragraphs, lists, …)
• CSS defines 'rules' or 'styles' for presenting every aspect
of an HTML document
• Font (family, size, color, weight, etc.)
• Background (color, image, position, repeat)
• Position and layout (of any object on the page)
• JavaScript defines dynamic behavior
• Programming logic for interaction with the user, to handle
events, etc. 4
JavaScript
• JavaScript is a front-end scripting language developed by
Netscape for dynamic content
• Lightweight, but with limited capabilities
• Can be used as object-oriented language
• Client-side technology
• Embedded in your HTML page
• Interpreted by the Web browser
• Simple and flexible
• Powerful to manipulate the DOM
5
JavaScript Advantages
• JavaScript allows interactivity such as:
• Implementing form validation
• React to user actions, e.g. handle keys
• Changing an image on moving mouse over it
• Sections of a page appearing and disappearing
• Content loading and changing dynamically
• Performing complex calculations
• Custom HTML controls, e.g. scrollable table
• Implementing AJAX functionality

6
What Can JavaScript Do?
• Can handle events
• Can read and write HTML elements and modify the DOM
tree
• Can validate form data
• Can access / modify browser cookies
• Can detect the user’s browser and OS
• Can be used as object-oriented language
• Can handle exceptions
• Can perform asynchronous server calls (AJAX) 7
The First Script
first-script.html
<html>

<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
alert('Hello JavaScript!');
</script>
</body>

</html>

8
Another Small Example
small-example.html
<html>

<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write('JavaScript rulez!');
</script>
</body>

</html>

9
Using JavaScript Code

• The JavaScript code can be placed in:


• <script> tag in the head
• <script> tag in the body – not recommended
• External files, linked via <script> tag the head
• Files usually have .js extension
<script src="scripts.js" type="text/javscript">
<!– code placed here will not be executed! -->
</script>
• Highly recommended
• The .js files get cached by the browser
10
JavaScript – When is Executed?
• JavaScript code is executed during the page loading or
when the browser fires an event
• All statements are executed at page loading
• Some statements just define functions that can be called later
• Function calls or code can be attached as "event
handlers" via tag attributes
• Executed when the event is fired by the browser

<input type=“submit" onclick="alert('clicked!')“


value="click me!" />
11
Calling a JavaScript Function from Event Handler –
Example

<html> image-onclick.html
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function test (message) {
alert(message);
}
</script>
</head>

<body>
<img src="logo.gif"
onclick="test('clicked!')" />
</body>
</html> 12
Using External Script Files
• Using external script files:
<html> external-JavaScript.html
<head>
<script src="sample.js" type="text/javascript">
</script>
</head> The <script> tag is always empty.
<body>
<button onclick="sample()" value="Call JavaScript
function from sample.js" />
</body>
</html>
• External JavaScript file:

function sample() {
alert('Hello from sample.js!')
13
} sample.js
The JavaScript
Syntax
JavaScript Syntax
• The JavaScript syntax is similar to C# and Java
• Operators (+, *, =, !=, &&, ++, …)
• Variables (typeless)
• Conditional statements (if, else)
• Loops (for, while)
• Arrays (my_array[]) and associative arrays (my_array['abc'])
• Functions (can return value)
• Function variables (like the C# delegates)

15
Data Types
• JavaScript data types:
• Numbers (integer, floating-point)
• Boolean (true / false)
• String type – string of characters
var myName = "You can use both single or double
quotes for strings";
• Arrays
var my_array = [1, 5.3, "aaa"];
• Associative arrays (hash tables)
var my_hash = {a:2, b:3, c:"text"};
16
Everything is Object
• Every variable can be considered as object
• For example strings and arrays have member functions:
objects.html
var test = "some string";
alert(test[7]); // shows letter 'r'
alert(test.charAt(5)); // shows letter 's'
alert("test".charAt(1)); //shows letter 'e'
alert("test".substring(1,3)); //shows 'es'

var arr = [1,3,4];


alert (arr.length); // shows 3
arr.push(7); // appends 7 to end of array
alert (arr[3]); // shows 7 17
String Operations
• The + operator joins strings
string1 = "fat ";
string2 = "cats";
alert(string1 + string2); // fat cats
• What is "9" + 9?
alert("9" + 9); // 99
• Converting string to number:

alert(parseInt("9") + 9); // 18
18
Arrays Operations and Properties
• Declaring new empty array:
var arr = new Array();
• Declaring an array holding few elements:
var arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
• Appending an element / getting the last element:
arr.push(3);
var element = arr.pop();
• Reading the number of elements (array length):
arr.length;
• Finding element's index in the array:
arr.indexOf(1);

19
Standard Popup Boxes
• Alert box with text and [OK] button
• Just a message shown in a dialog box:
alert("Some text here");
• Confirmation box
• Contains text, [OK] button and [Cancel] button:
confirm("Are you sure?");

• Prompt box
• Contains text, input field with default value:
prompt ("enter amount", 10);

20
Sum of Numbers – Example
sum-of-numbers.html
<html>

<head>
<title>JavaScript Demo</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
function calcSum() {
value1 =
parseInt(document.mainForm.textBox1.value);
value2 =
parseInt(document.mainForm.textBox2.value);
sum = value1 + value2;
document.mainForm.textBoxSum.value = sum;
}
</script> 21

</head>
Sum of Numbers – Example (2)
sum-of-numbers.html (cont.)
<body>
<form name="mainForm">
<input type="text" name="textBox1" /> <br/>
<input type="text" name="textBox2" /> <br/>
<input type="button" value="Process"
onclick="javascript: calcSum()" />
<input type="text" name="textBoxSum"
readonly="readonly"/>
</form>
</body>

</html>
22
JavaScript Prompt – Example
prompt.html
price = prompt("Enter the price", "10.00");
alert('Price + VAT = ' + price * 1.2);

23
Conditional Statement (if)
unitPrice = 1.30;
if (quantity > 100) {
unitPrice = 1.20;
}

Symbol Meaning
> Greater than
< Less than
>= Greater than or equal to
<= Less than or equal to
== Equal
!= Not equal 24
Conditional Statement (if) (2)
• The condition may be of Boolean or integer type:

conditional-statements.html
var a = 0;
var b = true;
if (typeof(a)=="undefined" || typeof(b)=="undefined") {
document.write("Variable a or b is undefined.");
}
else if (!a && b) {
document.write("a==0; b==true;");
} else {
document.write("a==" + a + "; b==" + b + ";");
} 25
Switch Statement
• The switch statement works like in C#:
switch-statements.html
switch (variable) {
case 1:
// do something
break;
case 'a':
// do something else
break;
case 3.14:
// another code
break;
default:
26
// something completely different
}
Loops

• Like in C#
• for loop
• while loop
• do … while loop
var counter;
for (counter=0; counter<4; counter++) {
alert(counter);
}
while (counter < 5) {
alert(++counter);
} loops.html 27
Functions
• Code structure – splitting code into parts
• Data comes in, processed, result returned
Parameters come in
function average(a, b, c) here.
{
var total; Declaring variables
total = a+b+c; is optional. Type is
return total/3; never declared.
}
Value returned
here. 28
Function Arguments
and Return Value
• Functions are not required to return a value
• When calling function it is not obligatory to specify all of
its arguments
• The function has access to all the arguments passed
via arguments array

function sum() {
var sum = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < arguments.length; i ++)
sum += parseInt(arguments[i]);
return sum;
}
alert(sum(1, 2, 4)); functions-demo.html
29
Document Object
Model (DOM)
Document Object Model (DOM)

• Every HTML element is accessible via the JavaScript DOM API


• Most DOM objects can be manipulated by the programmer
• The event model lets a document to react when the user does
something on the page
• Advantages
• Create interactive pages
• Updates the objects of a page without reloading it

31
Accessing Elements
• Access elements via their ID attribute
var elem = document.getElementById("some_id")
• Via the name attribute
var arr = document.getElementsByName("some_name")
• Via tag name
var imgTags = el.getElementsByTagName("img")
• Returns array of descendant <img> elements of the element "el"

32
DOM Manipulation
• Once we access an element, we can read and write its attributes
DOM-manipulation.html
function change(state) {
var lampImg = document.getElementById("lamp");
lampImg.src = "lamp_" + state + ".png";
var statusDiv =
document.getElementById("statusDiv");
statusDiv.innerHTML = "The lamp is " + state";
}

<img src="test_on.gif" onmouseover="change('off')"
onmouseout="change('on')" />
33
Common Element Properties
• Most of the properties are derived from the HTML
attributes of the tag
• E.g. id, name, href, alt, title, src, etc…
• style property – allows modifying the CSS styles of the
element
• Corresponds to the inline style of the element
• Not the properties derived from embedded or external CSS rules
• Example: style.width, style.marginTop,
style.backgroundImage

34
Common Element Properties (2)
• className – the class attribute of the tag
• innerHTML – holds all the entire HTML code inside the
element
• Read-only properties with information for the current
element and its state
• tagName, offsetWidth, offsetHeight, scrollHeight,
scrollTop, nodeType, etc…

35
Accessing Elements through the DOM Tree
Structure
• We can access elements in the DOM through some tree
manipulation properties:
• element.childNodes
• element.parentNode
• element.nextSibling
• element.previousSibling
• element.firstChild
• element.lastChild

36
Accessing Elements through the DOM Tree
– Example

var el = document.getElementById('div_tag');
alert (el.childNodes[0].value);
alert (el.childNodes[1].
getElementsByTagName('span').id);

<div id="div_tag">
<input type="text" value="test text" />
<div>
<span id="test">test span</span>
</div>
</div> accessing-elements-demo.html
 Warning: may not return what you expected due
to Browser differences 37
The HTML DOM
Event Model
The HTML DOM Event Model
• JavaScript can register event handlers
• Events are fired by the Browser and are sent to the specified
JavaScript event handler function
• Can be set with HTML attributes:
<img src="test.gif" onclick="imageClicked()" />

• Can be accessed through the DOM:

var img = document.getElementById("myImage");


img.onclick = imageClicked;

39
The HTML DOM Event Model (2)

• All event handlers receive one parameter


• It brings information about the event
• Contains the type of the event (mouse click, key press, etc.)
• Data about the location where the event has been fired (e.g. mouse
coordinates)
• Holds a reference to the event sender
• E.g. the button that was clicked

40
The HTML DOM Event Model (3)
• Holds information about the state of [Alt], [Ctrl] and [Shift] keys
• Some browsers do not send this object, but place it in the document.event
• Some of the names of the event’s object properties are browser-specific

41
Common DOM Events
• Mouse events:
• onclick, onmousedown, onmouseup
• onmouseover, onmouseout, onmousemove
• Key events:
• onkeypress, onkeydown, onkeyup
• Only for input fields
• Interface events:
• onblur, onfocus
• onscroll

42
Common DOM Events (2)
• Form events
• onchange – for input fields
• onsubmit
• Allows you to cancel a form submission
• Useful for form validation

• Miscellaneous events
• onload, onunload
• Allowed only for the <body> element
• Fires when all content on the page was loaded / unloaded

43
onload Event – Example
• onload event onload.html
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function greet() {
alert("Loaded.");
}
</script>
</head> 
<body onload="greet()" >
</body>
</html>
44
The Built-In Browser
Objects
Built-in Browser Objects
• The browser provides some read-only data via:
• window
• The top node of the DOM tree
• Represents the browser's window
• document
• holds information the current loaded document
• screen
• Holds the user’s display properties
• browser
• Holds information about the browser

46
DOM Hierarchy – Example

window

navigator screen document history location

form form

button form

47
Opening New Window – Example
• window.open() window-open.html
var newWindow = window.open("", "sampleWindow",
"width=300, height=100, menubar=yes,
status=yes, resizable=yes");

newWindow.document.write(
"<html><head><title>
Sample Title</title>
</head><body><h1>Sample
Text</h1></body>");
newWindow.status =
"Hello folks";

48
The Navigator Object
alert(window.navigator.userAgent);

The browser The navigator in the The userAgent


window browser window (browser ID)

49
The Screen Object
• The screen object contains information about the display
window.moveTo(0, 0);
x = screen.availWidth;
y = screen.availHeight;
window.resizeTo(x, y);

50
Document and Location
• document object
• Provides some built-in arrays of specific objects on the
currently loaded Web page
document.links[0].href = "yahoo.com";
document.write(
"This is some <b>bold text</b>");
• document.location
• Used to access the currently open URL or redirect the browser

document.location = "http://www.yahoo.com/";

51
Form Validation – Example
form-validation.html
function checkForm()
{
var valid = true;
if (document.mainForm.firstName.value == "") {
alert("Please type in your first name!");
document.getElementById("firstNameError").
style.display = "inline";
valid = false;
}
return valid;
}

<form name="mainForm" onsubmit="return checkForm()">
<input type="text" name="firstName" />

</form> 52
The Math Object
• The Math object provides some mathematical functions
math.html
for (i=1; i<=20; i++) {
var x = Math.random();
x = 10*x + 1;
x = Math.floor(x);
document.write(
"Random number (" +
i + ") in range " +
"1..10 --> " + x +
"<br/>");
}
53
The Date Object
• The Date object provides date / calendar functions
dates.html
var now = new Date();
var result = "It is now " + now;
document.getElementById("timeField")
.innerText = result;
...
<p id="timeField"></p>

54
Timers: setTimeout()
• Make something happen (once) after a fixed delay

var timer = setTimeout('bang()', 5000);

5 seconds after this statement


executes, this function is called

clearTimeout(timer);

Cancels the timer


55
Timers: setInterval()
• Make something happen repeatedly at fixed intervals
var timer = setInterval('clock()', 1000);

This function is called


continuously per 1 second.

clearInterval(timer);

Stop the timer.

56
Timer – Example
timer-demo.html
<script type="text/javascript">
function timerFunc() {
var now = new Date();
var hour = now.getHours();
var min = now.getMinutes();
var sec = now.getSeconds();
document.getElementById("clock").value =
"" + hour + ":" + min + ":" + sec;
}
setInterval('timerFunc()', 1000);
</script>
<input type="text" id="clock" />

57
Debugging JavaScript
Debugging JavaScript
• Modern browsers have JavaScript console where errors in scripts are
reported
• Errors may differ across browsers
• Several tools to debug JavaScript
• Microsoft Script Editor
• Add-on for Internet Explorer
• Supports breakpoints, watches
• JavaScript statement debugger; opens the script editor

59
Firebug
• Firebug – Firefox add-on for debugging JavaScript, CSS,
HTML
• Supports breakpoints, watches, JavaScript console editor
• Very useful for CSS and HTML too
• You can edit all the document real-time: CSS, HTML, etc
• Shows how CSS rules apply to element
• Shows Ajax requests and responses
• Firebug is written mostly in JavaScript

60
Firebug (2)

61
JavaScript Console Object
• The console object exists only if there is a debugging
tool that supports it
• Used to write log messages at runtime
• Methods of the console object:
• debug(message)
• info(message)
• log(message)
• warn(message)
• error(message)

62
JavaScript
?

?
?

?
Questions?
?

?
?
?
?
?

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