JavaScript

Table of Contents

  1. Types
  2. Objects
  3. Arrays
  4. Strings
  5. Functions
  6. Properties
  7. Variables
  8. Hoisting
  9. Comparison Operators & Equality
  10. Blocks
  11. Comments
  12. Whitespace
  13. Commas
  14. Semicolons
  15. Type Casting & Coercion
  16. Naming Conventions
  17. Accessors
  18. Constructors
  19. Events
  20. Modules
  21. jQuery
  22. ECMAScript 5 Compatibility
  23. Testing
  24. Performance
  25. Resources

Types

⬆ back to top

Objects

⬆ back to top

Arrays

⬆ back to top

Strings

⬆ back to top

Functions

⬆ back to top

Properties

⬆ back to top

Variables

⬆ back to top

Hoisting

⬆ back to top

Comparison Operators & Equality

⬆ back to top

Blocks

⬆ back to top

Comments

⬆ back to top

Whitespace

⬆ back to top

Commas

Edition 5 clarifies the fact that a trailing comma at the end of an ArrayInitialiser does not add to the length of the array. This is not a semantic change from Edition 3 but some implementations may have previously misinterpreted this.

```javascript
// bad
var hero = {
  firstName: 'Kevin',
  lastName: 'Flynn',
};

var heroes = [
  'Batman',
  'Superman',
];

// good
var hero = {
  firstName: 'Kevin',
  lastName: 'Flynn'
};

var heroes = [
  'Batman',
  'Superman'
];
```

⬆ back to top

Semicolons

⬆ back to top

Type Casting & Coercion

⬆ back to top

Naming Conventions

Why? JavaScript does not have the concept of privacy in terms of properties or methods. Although a leading underscore is a common convention to mean “private”, in fact, these properties are fully public, and as such, are part of your public API contract. This convention might lead developers to wrongly think that a change won’t count as breaking, or that tests aren’t needed. tl;dr: if you want something to be “private”, it must not be observably present.

```javascript
// bad
this.__firstName__ = 'Panda';
this.firstName_ = 'Panda';
this._firstName = 'Panda';

// good
this.firstName = 'Panda';
```

⬆ back to top

Accessors

⬆ back to top

Constructors

⬆ back to top

Events

⬆ back to top

Modules

⬆ back to top

jQuery

⬆ back to top

ECMAScript 5 Compatibility

⬆ back to top

Testing

⬆ back to top

Performance

⬆ back to top

Resources

Read This

Tools

Other Style Guides

Other Styles

Further Reading

Books

Blogs

Podcasts

⬆ back to top