If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript
No Starch Press (Verlag)
978-1-59327-585-3 (ISBN)
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What if William Shakespeare were asked to generate the Fibonacci series or Jane Austen had to write a factorial program?
In »If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript«, author Angus Croll imagines short JavaScript programs as written by famous wordsmiths. The result is a peculiar and charming combination of prose, poetry, and programming.
The best authors are those who obsess about language - and the same goes for JavaScript developers. To master either craft, you must experiment with language to develop your own style, your own idioms, and your own expressions.
To that end, »If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript« playfully bridges the worlds of programming and literature for the literary geek in all of us.
Featuring original artwork by Miran Lipovaca.
Angus Croll is obsessed with JavaScript and literature in equal measure. He works on Twitter's UI framework team where he co-authored the Flight framework. He writes the influential JavaScript, JavaScript blog and speaks at conferences worldwide.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Fibonacci
1 Ernest Hemingway
2 William Shakespeare
3 André Breton
4 Roberto Bolaño
5 Dan Brown
Factorial
6 Jack Kerouac
7 Jane Austen
8 Samuel Johnson
9 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
10 James Joyce
Happy Numbers
11 J.D. Salinger
12 Tupac Shakur
13 Virginia Woolf
14 Geoffrey Chaucer
15 Vladimir Nabokov
Prime Numbers
16 Jorge Luis Borges
17 Lewis Carroll
18 Douglas Adams
19 Charles Dickens
20 David Foster Wallace
Say It
21 Sylvia Plath
22 Italo Calvino
23 J.K. Rowling
24 Arundhati Roy
25 Franz Kafka
Poetic Interludes
1 Edgar Allan Poe
2 William Shakespeare
3 Dylan Thomas
4 Walt Whitman
A real treat, and a book whose time has come.
Rob Friesel, author of The PhantomJS Cookbook
A fantastic short read that is worth picking up for any lover of computer science or literature. I cannot recommend it enough.
The Eckleburg Project
Bring some fun inspiration to the software developer in your life.
Monique DeVoe, for Embedded Computing Design
Twenty-five famous authors, lots of JavaScript, lots of prose and poetry. What’s not to like? Put “If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript” on your shopping list.
Alan Zeichick, for SD Times
Looking forward to a tech book for the first time in a long time. [This] is going to be rad.
Brian LeRoux, creator Phone Gap
Best hypothetical question we've heard in a while.
The Millions
I'm so excited by the "If Hemingway wrote JavaScript" book by the completely brilliant Angus Croll.
Robert Nyman, Mozilla Tech Evangelist, Editor of Mozilla Hacks
You should have this book at hand at all times...so whenever you start feeling disheartened, unmotivated or simply bored with what you are doing...you'll look at it's chapters and remember that programming can be fun. That, beyond good and bad parts, beyond best practices and the professional fences with which we surround ourselves, those LEGO sets that we call programming languages, can and should be played with.
Javier Alba, JavaScript developer, voracious reader
Sweet, edifying and laugh-out-loud funny.
Patrick Ewing, Twitter hall-of-famer, esteemed rubyist and coiner of "duck-punching"
Code, literature and art are beautifully represented in @angustweets' new book.
Jenn Schiffer, Bocoup engineer, celebrity speaker, comedian
I really, thoroughly enjoyed the book...Angus is hilarious, well-read, and a great writer.
Alex Sexton, engineer at Stripe, Modernizr core team, jQuery Board of Directors, Dojo Foundation Board
Yes, If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript by @angustweets is cool.
Brendan Eich, inventor of JavaScript, co-founder of Mozilla
Probably my favorite book about programming. This year's for sure. Totally enthralled.
Steve Klabnik, author Rust for Rubyists, web celebrity
Last night I read If Hemingway Wrote JavaScript, twice, then pre-ordered a physical copy.
Rick Waldron, creator of Johnny-Five and JavaScript standards author
A thought experiment, appealing to Javascript and literary nerds alike.
Dan Shurley, for Nomadic Press
Wild experiments are what moves a genre forward. And this is a format of programming book that's certainly never been tried before.
Marijn Haverbeke
Zusatzinfo | illustrations |
---|---|
Verlagsort | Daly City, California |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 210 x 203 mm |
Gewicht | 490 g |
Einbandart | kartoniert |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Web / Internet ► JavaScript |
Schlagworte | Geek • Geek; Humor • Geekkultur • Hemingway • JavaScript • Shakespeare, • Weltliteratur |
ISBN-10 | 1-59327-585-4 / 1593275854 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-59327-585-3 / 9781593275853 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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