JavaScript is a scripting language most often used for client-side web development. It was the originating dialect of the ECMAScript standard. It is a dynamic, weakly typed, prototype-based language with first-class functions. JavaScript was influenced by many languages and was designed to look like Java, but be easier for non-programmers to work with.
Although best known for its use in websites (as client-side JavaScript), JavaScript is also used to enable scripting access to objects embedded in other applications (see below).
JavaScript, despite the name, is essentially unrelated to the Java programming language, although both have the common C syntax, and JavaScript copies many Java names and naming conventions. The language was originally named "LiveScript" but was renamed in a co-marketing deal between Netscape and Sun, in exchange for Netscape bundling Sun's Java runtime with their then-dominant browser. The key design principles within JavaScript are inherited from the Self and Scheme programming languages.
"JavaScript" is a trademark of Sun Microsystems. It was used under license for technology invented and implemented by Netscape Communications and current entities such as the Mozilla Foundation.
JavaScript was originally developed by Brendan Eich of Netscape under the name Mocha, which was later renamed to LiveScript, and finally to JavaScript. The change of name from LiveScript to JavaScript roughly coincided with Netscape adding support for Java technology in its Netscape Navigator web browser. JavaScript was first introduced and deployed in the Netscape browser version 2.0B3 in December 1995. The naming has caused confusion, giving the impression that the language is a spin-off of Java, and it has been characterized by many as a marketing ploy by Netscape to give JavaScript the cachet of what was then the hot new web-programming language.
Microsoft named its dialect of the language JScript to avoid trademark issues. JScript was first supported in Internet Explorer version 3.0, released in August 1996, and it included Y2K-compliant date functions, unlike those based on java.util.Date in JavaScript at the time. The dialects are perceived to be so similar that the terms "JavaScript" and "JScript" are often used interchangeably (including in this article). Microsoft, however, notes dozens of ways in which JScript is not ECMA compliant
Netscape submitted JavaScript to Ecma International for standardization resulting in the standardized version named ECMAScript.
if statements, while loops, switch statements, etc.). One partial exception is scoping: C-style block-level scoping is not supported. JavaScript 1.7, however, supports block-level scoping with the let keyword. Like C, JavaScript makes a distinction between expressions and statements.
x could be bound to a number, then later rebound to a string. JavaScript supports various ways to test the type of an object, including duck typing. objects as associative arrays: JavaScript is heavily object-based. Objects are associative arrays, augmented with prototypes (see below). Object property names are associative array keys: obj.x = 10 and obj["x"] = 10 are equivalent, the dot notation being merely syntactic sugar. Properties and their values can be added, changed, or deleted at run-time. The properties of an object can also be enumerated via a for...in loop. run-time evaluation: JavaScript includes an eval function that can execute statements provided as strings at run-time.
new creates a new object and calls that function with its local this keyword bound to that object for that invocation. The function's prototype property determines the new object's prototype. functions as methods: Unlike many object-oriented languages, there is no distinction between a function definition and a method definition. Rather, the distinction occurs during function calling; a function can be called as a method. When a function is invoked as a method of an object, the function's local this keyword is bound to that object for that invocation.
arguments object. array and object literals: Like many scripting languages, arrays and objects (associative arrays in other languages) can be created with a succinct shortcut syntax. The object literal in particular is the basis of the JSON data format. regular expressions: JavaScript also supports regular expressions in a manner similar to Perl, which provide a concise and powerful syntax for text manipulation that is more sophisticated than the built-in string functions.
As of 2008, the latest version of the language is JavaScript 1.8. It is a superset of ECMAScript (ECMA-262) Edition 3. Extensions to the language, including partial E4X (ECMA-357) support and experimental features considered for inclusion into ECMAScript Edition 4, are documented here
Sample code:
// Mouseover commands to change look of buttons & text, etc., on playlist
document.onmouseover = function(e) {
getElementByEvent(e);
switch (el.className) {
case 'tab':
el.className = 'ovrtab';
break;
case 'off':
el.className = 'ovr';
break;
case 'bti2f wbd':
el.className ='bti2t wbd';
el.parentNode.className = 'bto2t';
if (el.id.charAt(0)=='w') {
window.status = type[currentTab.id.charAt(1) - 1][el.id.substring(1)][0];
} else if (el.id.charAt(0)=='p') {
window.status = type[currentTab.id.charAt(1) - 1][el.id.substring(1)][1];
}
break; }
switch (el.id) {
case 'inHip':
el.style.color = '#000000';
break;
}
}
The primary use of JavaScript is to write functions that are embedded in or included from HTML pages and interact with the Document Object Model (DOM) of the page. Some simple examples of this usage are:
Because JavaScript code can run locally in a user's browser (rather than on a remote server) it can respond to user actions quickly, making an application feel more responsive. Furthermore, JavaScript code can detect user actions which HTML alone cannot, such as individual keystrokes. Applications such as Gmail take advantage of this: much of the user-interface logic is written in JavaScript, and JavaScript dispatches requests for information (such as the content of an e-mail message) to the server. The wider trend of Ajax programming similarly exploits this strength.
A JavaScript engine (also known as JavaScript interpreter or JavaScript implementation) is an interpreter that interprets JavaScript source code and executes the script accordingly. The first ever JavaScript engine was created by Brendan Eich at Netscape Communications Corporation, for the Netscape Navigator web browser. The engine, code-named SpiderMonkey, is implemented in C. It has since been updated (in JavaScript 1.5) to conform to ECMA-262 Edition 3. The Rhino engine, created primarily by Norris Boyd (also at Netscape) is a JavaScript implementation in Java. Rhino, like SpiderMonkey, is ECMA-262 Edition 3 compliant.
The most common host environment for JavaScript is by far a web browser. Web browsers typically use the public API to create "host objects" responsible for reflecting the DOM into JavaScript. The web server is another common application of the engine. A JavaScript webserver would expose host objects representing an [
] request and response objects, which a JavaScript program could then manipulate to dynamically generate web pages.
A minimal example of a web page containing JavaScript (using HTML 4.01 syntax) would be:
Your browser either does not support JavaScript, or you have JavaScript turned off.
document.write('Hello World!');
The DOM interfaces for manipulating web pages are not part of the ECMAScript standard, or of JavaScript itself. Officially, they are defined by a separate standardization effort by the W3C; in practice, browser implementations differ from the standards and from each other, and not all browsers execute JavaScript.
To deal with these differences, JavaScript authors can attempt to write standards-compliant code which will also be executed correctly by most browsers; failing that, they can write code that checks for the presence of certain browser features and behaves differently if they are not available. In some cases, two browsers may both implement a feature but with different behavior, and authors may find it practical to detect what browser is running and change their script's behavior to match. Programmers may also use libraries or toolkits which take browser differences into account.
Furthermore, scripts will not work for all users. For example, a user may:
To support these users, web authors can try to create pages which degrade gracefully on user agents (browsers) which do not support the page's JavaScript.
A common JavaScript-related security problem is cross-site scripting, or XSS, a violation of the same-origin policy. XSS vulnerabilities occur when an attacker is able to cause a trusted web site, such as an online banking website, to include a malicious script in the webpage presented to a victim. The script in this example can then access the banking application with the privileges of the victim, potentially disclosing secret information or transferring money without the victim's authorization.
XSS vulnerabilities can also occur because of implementation mistakes by browser authors.
XSS is related to cross-site request forgery or XSRF. In XSRF one website causes a victim's browser to generate fraudulent requests to another site with the victim's legitimate [cookies] attached to the request.
It also does not make sense to rely on JavaScript to prevent user interface operations (such as "view source" or "save image"). This is because a client could simply ignore such scripting.
These flaws have affected major browsers including Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari.
Plugins, such as video players, Macromedia Flash, and the wide range of ActiveX controls enabled by default in Microsoft Internet Explorer, may also have flaws exploitable via JavaScript, and such flaws have been exploited in the past. In Windows Vista, Microsoft has attempted to contain the risks of bugs such as buffer overflows by running the Internet Explorer process with limited privileges.
Incorrectly granting privileges to JavaScript from the web has played a role in vulnerabilities in both Internet Explorer and Firefox. In Windows XP Service Pack 2, Microsoft demoted JScript's privileges in Internet Explorer.
Some versions of Microsoft Windows allow JavaScript stored on a computer's hard drive to run as a general-purpose, non-sandboxed program. This makes JavaScript (like VBScript) a theoretically viable vector for a Trojan horse, although JavaScript Trojan horses are uncommon in practice. (See Windows Script Host.)
javax.script package, including a JavaScript implementation based on Mozilla Rhino. Thus, Java applications can host scripts that access the application's variables and objects, much like web browsers host scripts that access the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) for a webpage.QtScript module to interpret JavaScript, analogous to javax.script.MacOS object for interaction with the operating system and third-party applications.Currently, Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, and Opera all have third-party script debuggers available for them.
Internet Explorer has three debuggers available for it: Microsoft Visual Studio is the richest of the three, closely followed by Microsoft Script Editor (a component of Microsoft Office), and finally the free Microsoft Script Debugger which is far more basic than the other two. The free Microsoft Visual Web Developer Express provides a limited version of the JavaScript debugging functionality in Microsoft Visual Studio.
Web applications within Firefox can be debugged using the Firebug plug-in, or the older Venkman debugger, which also works with the Mozilla browser. Firefox also has a simpler built-in Error Console, which logs JavaScript and CSS errors and warnings.
Drosera is a debugger for the WebKit engine on Macintosh and Windows powering Apple's Safari.
There are also some free tools such as JSLint, a code quality tool that will scan JavaScript code looking for problems, as well as a non-free tool called SplineTech JavaScript HTML Debugger.
Since JavaScript is interpreted, loosely-typed, and may be hosted in varying environments, each with their own compatibility differences, a programmer has to take extra care to make sure the code executes as expected in as wide a range of circumstances as possible, and that functionality degrades gracefully when it does not.
| Version | Release date | Equivalent to | Netscape Navigator | Mozilla Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | March 1996 | 2.0 | 3.0 | ||||
| 1.1 | August 1996 | 3.0 | |||||
| 1.2 | June 1997 | 4.0-4.05 | |||||
| 1.3 | October 1998 | ECMA-262 1st edition / ECMA-262 2nd edition | 4.06-4.7x | 4.0 | |||
| 1.4 | Netscape Server | ||||||
| 1.5 | November 2000 | ECMA-262 3rd edition | 6.0 | 1.0 | 5.5 (JScript 5.5), 6 (JScript 5.6), 7 (JScript 5.7), 8 (JScript 6) | 6.0, 7.0, 8.0, 9.0 | |
| 1.6 | November 2005 | 1.5 + Array extras + Array and String generics + E4X | 1.5 | ||||
| 1.7 | October 2006 | 1.6 + Pythonic generators + Iterators + let | 2.0 | 3.x | |||
| 1.8 | June 2008 | 1.7 + Generator expressions + Expression closures | 3.0 | ||||
| 1.9 | 1.8 + New Features | 3.1 |
The next major version of JavaScript, 2.0, will conform to ECMA-262 4th edition.
The standardization effort for JavaScript also needed to avoid trademark issues, so the ECMA 262 standard calls the language ECMAScript, three editions of which have been published since the work started in November 1996.
Microsoft's VBScript, like JavaScript, can be run client-side in web pages. VBScript has syntax derived from Visual Basic and is only supported by Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
JSON, or JavaScript Object Notation, is a general-purpose data interchange format that is defined as a subset of JavaScript.
JavaScript is also considered a functional programming language like Scheme and OCaml because it has closures and supports higher-order functions.
Mozilla browsers currently support LiveConnect, a feature that allows JavaScript and Java to intercommunicate on the web. However, support for LiveConnect is scheduled to be phased out in the future.