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Episode: 1388
Title: HPR1388: JavaScript
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1388/hpr1388.mp3
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:40:00
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Hello everyone, my name is SIGFLOPS, SIGFLOPS and the Slobble that is, and welcome to another
issue of another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
In this episode, I'm going to be talking about JavaScript, particularly my perspective
of it.
I just started programming in JavaScript, and this is completely off the cost.
This is a straight recording without any editing.
I'm actually in the hospital right now, and it's boring and sell here.
So I'm going to record a podcast and hear how about that.
JavaScript is a language, an interpreted language, or just in time, a compiled language.
I believe it's an interpretive language to be mistaken on that, but it's an interpretive
language that is typically run on websites.
We have a JavaScript engine or a JavaScript virtual machine, as they're called, on a browser.
The information you get from the HTTP server is JavaScript, and that gets actually run and
controls the web page.
It controls the document object model of the web page.
So JavaScript controls web pages dynamically.
You can also have JavaScript on the server side through Node.js, for instance, which
is an implementation of Chrome's JavaScript virtual machine.
But I'm going to be talking specifically about it on the client side, because that's
what I'm doing.
Let's see here.
I've been partying my GUI to JavaScript for a while, and that's a while, like a few days,
and learning about it, it's a learning experience.
I really like it.
It's a concept I really like.
I'll get into the concept of JavaScript a bit later.
But JavaScript was invented in 1995 by Netscape.
I've been told it's SchemeLite.
I actually haven't used Scheme.
I believe Scheme is a list dialect that I haven't actually used.
I've heard that it's SchemeLite.
So if I have a program in Scheme, I'll know what I'm doing.
It has a C syntax, so it's very C-like, and that's very comfortable for me, since this
perspective is from a C program that's receptive.
The default variable in JavaScript is the var for variable, which is dynamically typed.
In C, the default variable is int for integer, which is statically typed, which means at the
time of declaration, memory is actually allocated on the stack, perhaps, or in the heap.
Or in the data segment, well, in the stacker, the heap pretty much, for where the actual
information is stored for a C integer.
It's a bit different for JavaScript because it's dynamically typed.
The type of variable it is gets implemented at the time of its use.
So if you have a function with the input arguments to and where, if you call that
function with a string for two, then two is interpreted as a string in the function call.
Or if you have it as a object that's interpreted as an object for a function call.
Strings and objects are very similar from my understand.
JavaScript works with objects as variables instead of integers and floating point numbers and strings and
whatnot, the primary data storage of JavaScript is the object.
Let's see here. JavaScript is an asynchronous language, which is kind of interesting and fun.
C is a synchronous language, which means one line of code is executed one after another in sequence.
And you can have a for loop in C, for instance, an infinite for loop, where you jump to the beginning of the
for loop, jump to the beginning of the for loop, jump to the beginning of the for loop to stop in between and
never get out of the for loop. Like for a game loop, for instance.
Unless the game is over, then you break out of the for loop. But there are no for loops.
There are no infinite for loops in JavaScript. Everything gets run at once.
And if you need to run other things in sequence, it's usually called back from the object that you have run.
If that makes sense, I'll get into that a bit later here.
JavaScript, you know, C can be asynchronous too, because C can have interrupts, and you can have signals,
and you can do things based on on events that are outside of the program.
So C can be asynchronous, but JavaScript is meant to be asynchronous, which I think is a bit different.
It's fun writing things for it because you know it's the right language, if that makes sense.
Like with just the asynchronous of it, and you are never waiting pretty much.
So you're never waiting. You're never waiting on a move text. There aren't any move text in JavaScript.
And so you're never waiting on a spin lock or anything like that.
You just run, and that's very good for multi-processor systems, where you utilize the most without spin locking or waiting or anything like that.
It's what's right, which is kind of fun knowing that it's the right paradigm for language.
In my opinion, it's the right paradigm for language of the future.
And it really is of the future. C is kind of, you know, it's good to know C, especially right operating systems,
or work on operating systems, or work on anything with the Linux or BSD, really.
C is a very good language to know. If you're working on embedded systems, it's a good language to know.
But a lot of the web and a lot of the information structure is based on JavaScript and these things.
JavaScript, being a web language primarily, it doesn't have to be a web language.
In addition to PHP, you can have CGI, straight C programs that run on the server side.
You can have JavaScript on the server side with Node.js.
So you have those combinational languages, plus you have the content.
What is the content style, something CSS? I forget what it stands for, but it's a language describing object variables.
Of the DOM, of the document object model, and the document object model is specified by an HTML document.
And so, like, the new world of programming is those primary languages.
And so it's exciting to get to know them.
Let's see here. Like I said, there is no infinite loop in JavaScript.
Things get executed asynchronously.
If you have a bit of code that needs to run after you've done something, like open a file or something like that,
you have to be run as a callback from the object that calls that does the thing before, if that makes sense.
Let's see here. What else?
You know, I think that's all. I really have to say it's new.
The JavaScript is very exciting.
And it's the right thing to do for multi-processing systems, in my opinion.
It's asynchronous. The default variable is there, which is dynamic.
You deal with objects.
The only object is kind of funny because there aren't any, you don't have any pointers to things.
If you have their A and their B equals five, and then A equals B, A will be five.
But if you change B, A will still be five.
Because you copy the data. You don't reference it, like you do in C.
You don't have pointers and whatnot.
So that's a little hard to get your head over, but it's pointless.
So it's a high-level language, higher than C.
It's not close to the machine, pointers, being very close to the machine,
being actual memory positions, and addresses, and references, and whatnot.
There's none of that in JavaScript, because there isn't any room for it.
And let's see here.
I think that's all I have to say about JavaScript.
So thank you for listening, everyone. Take care.
And I'll get out of the hospital soon.
Bye-bye.
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