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The Latest JavaScript Topics

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Everything You Need to Know About Building MVP With React and Firebase
The creation of this minimal core is known as ‘Minimal Viable Product’ or MVP. Let us learn how to create an MVP using React and Firebase.
July 4, 2022
by Amit Gupta
· 6,771 Views · 1 Like
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NextJS Vs React: Key Differences, Advantages and Limitations
This blog will help you understand the advantages and disadvantages of both React and NextJS, which one is better, and what to choose for your next project.
July 1, 2022
by Sidharth Jain
· 8,694 Views · 3 Likes
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5 Best JavaScript Web Development Frameworks
JavaScript is a very popular and powerful programming language. In this article, we have discussed the top 5 web development frameworks of JavaScript.
July 1, 2022
by William Lowery
· 11,921 Views · 3 Likes
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Using an Array as Function Parameter in JavaScript
Let's look at how function parameters can be defined as arrays in Javascript.
June 30, 2022
by Johnny Simpson
· 10,277 Views · 2 Likes
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Reactive Kafka With Streaming in Spring Boot
How to integrate Spring Boot and Kafka with Streams in a reactive solution.
June 28, 2022
by Sven Loesekann
· 19,611 Views · 5 Likes
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Supabase and Angular Quickstart Guide
This example provides the steps to build a simple user management app (from scratch!) using Supabase and Angular.
June 28, 2022
by Rory Wilding
· 6,871 Views · 2 Likes
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How Template Literal Types Work in TypeScript
Let's look at how template liter al types work.
June 20, 2022
by Johnny Simpson
· 4,585 Views · 3 Likes
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The Definitive Guide to Developing Portable Tizen Apps
This article complements the online lecture series delivered at the annual Tizen Developer Conference and elsewhere.
Updated June 18, 2022
by Michael Schloh Von Bennewitz
· 45,893 Views · 1 Like
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Exploring Deferred and Promise in JQuery
The Deferred object in jQuery is based upon the concept of Promises. To understand all about Deferred objects, let's try to understand what a Promise is about.
Updated June 18, 2022
by Ryan Sukale
· 21,843 Views · 1 Like
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Supabase and React Quickstart Guide
Supabase is an open source firebase alternative. This example provides the steps to build a simple user management app (from scratch!) using Supabase and React.
Updated June 15, 2022
by Rory Wilding
· 3,436 Views · 4 Likes
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Complete Guide to Lazy Load Images for Better Website Performance
If you want to conserve bandwidth on your website and get a faster loading website, Lazy Load images JavaScript is the way to go.
June 13, 2022
by Harish Rajora
· 5,084 Views · 2 Likes
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Delegating JWT Validation for Greater Flexibility
Java decoupled solution for validating JSON Web Tokens, using callbacks and thus promoting decoupling and flexibility.
June 9, 2022
by Horatiu Dan DZone Core CORE
· 7,320 Views · 8 Likes
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What Is WebAssembly?
WebAssembly is a small, fast binary format that promises near-native performance for web applications.WebAssembly is designed to be a compilation target for any language.
June 8, 2022
by Traven West
· 5,869 Views · 4 Likes
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Selenium vs. Protractor: What's the Difference?
As software testers, we should be aware of these 2 phrases, Selenium and Protractor. We will see the difference between selenium and protractor.
Updated June 6, 2022
by Pallavi Singh
· 6,476 Views · 4 Likes
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Creating a Simple API Stub With API Gateway and S3
This post shows a nice way of using Mapping Templates in API Gateway to transform the path and create a simple stub.
June 3, 2022
by Jeroen Reijn DZone Core CORE
· 5,480 Views · 2 Likes
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How to Build a Treemap Using JavaScript
Learn what treemaps are and how to visualize data in a cool interactive treemap chart using JS.
June 1, 2022
by Awan Shrestha
· 13,171 Views · 9 Likes
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Instrumenting a JavaScript Application for OpenTelemetry, Part 1: Setup
This post looks at the first steps for instrumenting a JavaScript application to report OpenTelemetry metrics.
Updated June 1, 2022
by Chris Ward DZone Core CORE
· 6,171 Views · 1 Like
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Better Scaffolding with jQuery - Part I
Grails scaffolding works great out of the box. Today I want to see how we can improve adding data to the many side of a one-to-many relationship using jQuery, jQueryUI's Dialog, and some Ajax. Using the same domain objects as my previous article I want to show how we can add Reminders to an Event without needing to navigate to a new page, assuming it is ok to create events without reminders. For the sake of clarity, here are the domain objects. class Event { String name static hasMany = [reminders: Reminder] static constraints = { } } class Reminder { ReminderType reminderType Integer duration static belongsTo = [event:Event] static constraints = { } String toString() { "${reminderType} : ${duration}" } } Note that in Reminder I've added a ReminderType. This is a simple Enum with the values Email and SMS. I did this to add a bit of meat to the Reminder form. Once you have a new grails application up and running you'll need to download a couple of things. The first is jQuery. The easiest way to get this in grails is to simply install the plugin. Execute "grails install-plugin jquery" and then in the views/layout/main.gsp modify the g:javascript tag to use "jquery" instead of "application" for the library attribute. We're going to be using jQueryUI's Dialog widget so you'll need to grab a copy of jQueryUI. You can download it from here. The simplest thing is to just include everything and select a theme. Once you extracted the contents of the ZIP file place the jqueryui javascript file in your web-app/js directory and the entire theme folder under web-app/css. Then add the following to your main.gsp: Modify any paths as necessary. Next you'll need to go ahead and create the Event and Reminder domains. Once you've done that we just need the basic scaffolding for all the CRUD. We actually need to generate it (not using def scaffold = true) because we'll need to modify some of the scaffolding code. So execute the following commands: grails generate-all com.package.Event grails generate-all com.package.Reminder Go ahead and run your application and make sure things are working as expected. We're going to focus the next part of our discussion on the edit page for Event. Go ahead and create an event and go to the edit form. It should look like this: If you click Add Reminder right now you are going to be taken to the reminder create screen. What we want to do is change the behavior so that when Add Reminder is clicked a Dialog is shown with the Reminder form in it. Then when we hit a save button, an ajax POST is sent to the server and then we'll use the response to populate the unordered list with the newly created Reminder. First we need a new JavaScript file. I created one called tutorial.js and placed it in web-app/js. Feel free to call it whatever you want. Just make sure you include it in your main.gsp. Next we need to make some modifications to Event's edit.gsp. In this tutorial we are going to hard code the Reminder create form inside the Event's edit.gsp and use jQueryUI's Dialog API to show and hide it when we need it. In a future tutorial I'll show how we can pull the form in via ajax but for now, I want to keep things as simple as possible. Open views/event/edit.gsp and just before the closing body tag, add the following (this is actually just a copy and paste from views/reminder/create, btw): I've wrapped the form inside a div with an id of dialog-form. jQueryUI will use this id for it's selector. Let's go create some javascript. Open up your new javascript file (mine was called tutorial.js) and begin by adding the following skeleton code: $(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog({ autoOpen: false, height: 300, width: 350, modal: true, buttons: { 'Create a Reminder': function() { }, Cancel: function() { $(this).dialog('close'); } } }); }); If you've used jQuery before this code will look pretty familiar. I'm not going to go into any major details here as it is out of scope for this tutorial. We've created 2 buttons for this dialog. When the 'Create a Reminder' button is clicked, it's callback function is triggered. This is where we'll issue the ajax request to post the form. If the cancel button is triggered, we simply close the dialog. Next, we need to modify the 'Add Reminder' link on the edit page and then add an event handler for it in our javascript so that it displays the Reminder form. Remove or comment out the following line: ${message(code: 'default.add.label', args: [message(code: 'reminder.label', default: 'Reminder')])} And add this in its place: ${message(code: 'default.add.label', args: [message(code: 'reminder.label', default: 'Reminder')])} The reason we didn't just give the g:link tag an id is because it will render the id as the Reminder.id and we simply need it to wire up the event. There are several other options we could have gone with here but this is a simple solution. We now need to wire up the event. I'm showing the full javascript file up to this point with the added code so you can see where it goes: $(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog({ autoOpen: false, height: 300, width: 350, modal: true, buttons: { 'Create a Reminder': function() { }, Cancel: function() { $(this).dialog('close'); } } }); $('#add_reminder').click(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog('open'); }); }); Go ahead and try it. Create a new Event and go to it's edit page. Click the Add Reminder and you should see something like this If you click Cancel the dialog should close. If you click Create a Reminder, nothing happens. We still need to add this code. Go back to your javascript file and let's fill out the Create a Reminder callback function. Again, I've included the entire javascript file and then I'll talk about the added code. $(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog({ autoOpen: false, height: 300, width: 350, modal: true, buttons: { 'Create a Reminder': function() { var duration = $("#duration").val(); var reminderType = $("#reminderType option:selected").val(); var event = $("#id").val(); $.post(contextPath + '/reminder/save', {'event.id':event, duration:duration, reminderType:reminderType}, function(data) { }, 'json'); $(this).dialog('close'); }, Cancel: function() { $(this).dialog('close'); } }, close: function() { } }); $('#add_reminder').click(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog('open'); }); }); The first thing we do is we get the form parameters we want to pass back to the server. So we need the duration value, the reminderType value, and we need to pass back the event id so that the new reminder is added to the correct event. Note that the event.id is simply a hidden field on the edit form. Then we issue the $.post() to the server giving it the URL, our parameters, and we define a callback function. I've also defined the response type as json. This will be explained in a bit. We need to do something with the response but first we need to modify our ReminderController's save method to render json instead of the typical redirect that normally would happen. Open ReminderController and replace the following code: flash.message = "${message(code: 'default.created.message', args: [message(code: 'reminder.label', default: 'Reminder'), reminderInstance.id])}" redirect(action: "show", id: reminderInstance.id) with this code: render reminderInstance as JSON Just for clarity here is the entire save method from ReminderController.groovy. def save = { def reminderInstance = new Reminder(params) if (reminderInstance.save(flush: true)) { render reminderInstance as JSON } else { render(view: "create", model: [reminderInstance: reminderInstance]) } } Make sure you add the import statement for JSON if not using an IDE that reminds you to do so. We save the new reminder and we return the reminder as json. This is great because we need to add a new list item to the unordered list on the event's edit page, just as it does when edting an event with existing reminders. Here comes more javascript, again, the entire file and then I'll explain the new code: $(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog({ autoOpen: false, height: 300, width: 350, modal: true, buttons: { 'Create a Reminder': function() { var duration = $("#duration").val(); var reminderType = $("#reminderType option:selected").val(); var event = $("#id").val(); $.post(contextPath + '/reminder/save', {'event.id':event, duration:duration, reminderType:reminderType}, function(data) { var item = $(""); var link = $("").attr("href", contextPath + "/reminder/show/" + data.id).html(data.reminderType.name + " : " + data.duration); item.append(link); $('#reminder_list').append(item); }, 'json'); $(this).dialog('close'); }, Cancel: function() { $(this).dialog('close'); } } }); $('#add_reminder').click(function() { $('#dialog-form').dialog('open'); }); }); The newly added code here is the callback for $.post(). First we create a new LI element. Then we create a new anchor element and add the href attribute. Notice how when we need the reminder properties, since it is a json object, we can just reference the properties directly. The HTML of the anchor tag mimicks what is done in the toString method of Reminder. That way, when we come back to this page with existing reminders, and add new ones, they appear the same way. The last thing you need to do is add an id of "reminder_list" to the UL on th edit page so that we can append the item to it. And that's it. In the next article I'll show how we deal with validation errors when saving a Reminder who's constraints fail.
May 26, 2022
by Gregg Bolinger
· 36,906 Views · 1 Like
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AWS Lambda With MySQL (RDS) and API Gateway
In this article, we discuss the limitations of Lambda and how to design simple micro-service using AWS API gateway, and RDS.
Updated May 26, 2022
by Viquar Khan
· 47,689 Views · 9 Likes
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Storeon: An Event-Based State Manager for Velo
In this article, we explain how to manag state in Velo with a light-weight and robust solution: Storeon, an event-based state manager.
Updated May 26, 2022
by Alexander Zaytsev
· 10,227 Views · 4 Likes
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