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Reactive Programming with JavaScript

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About This BookLearn to develop webapps for Facebook's front-end development using ReactJSUse functional reactive programming with ReactJSEasyto understand, comprehensive with in-depth coverage of practical examplesWho This Book Is ForIf you are proficient with JavaScript and want to know about functional, reactive, or functional reactive programming and the Facebook approach to it, then this book is for you. This book is also for web frontend developers who would like web apps to be developed faster and more easily using the ReactJS framework. And finally, it is intended for developers who want to see how programming is fun again! A basic knowledge of JavaScript is expected.What You Will LearnLearn functional reactive programming with JavaScript for non-mathematiciansExperience Facebook's primary frontend framework, ReactJSAn excellent stepping stone to learning ReactJS NativeUsing the tools Facebook uses to build a better site in less timeCreate and implement a website using Node.jsDelve into the development of web apps using ReactJSImplementation of FRP ReactJS with live examplesIn DetailReactive programming is carried out using the building blocks of functional programming. JavaScript libraries such as ReactJS are used for frontend web development that is both competent and powerful.This book is among the first to address how everyday programmers can take advantage of (functional) reactive programming without having an extremely heavy mathematical background. Along with the basics a frontend developer can easily connect with, it also covers the basics of functional programming. It goes on to explain nonfunctional reactive programming using a live example, and then gives an overview of reactive programming. Tools to make functional reactive programming easier such as Bacon.js, a library like jQuery, are also covered. Finally, it finishes with building one small and one larger frontend project.

264 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 31, 2015

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Julio Biason.
199 reviews28 followers
May 27, 2016
If I had to define this book in a single word, I'd had to go with "unfocused".

Now, with that title, you'd expect to learn about the principles that drove the design of things like "ReactJS". But it doesn't. This is not about Reactive Programming. It's about ReactJS. And it's not about Reactive Programming, it's about Reactive Funcional Programming.

Well, you'd still expect it to come with some conclusions about ReactJS, right? Wrong again.

Most of the time you'll spend reading things that have absolutely no relation with reactive programming, functional reactive programming or even ReactJS. There is a long rant about C++ which ends with no conclusion at all and gives no pointers on how it connects to the whole. There is another discussion about INTERCAL which leads to nowhere -- maybe, except, the author's bank account for the number of words.

At some point, the author finally discusses a bit of functional programming talking about
map
,
filter
and
reduce
, but it goes nowhere from there and a whole chapter with 10+ pages have a single paragraph about real, focused talk about functional programming; the rest is just more rambling going to nowhere.

If it was possible to run tests over the content of the book, the amount of content out of a coverage on a BDD about Reactive Programming would point that about 90% of it is never tested. It's content that talks absolutely nothing about reactive programming, with large portions being repeated over and over again (which makes me, once again, wonder why Packt pays for reviewers when this kind of bullshit happens).

"This book is about ReactJS", the author says in the introduction, but there are only 4 chapters about ReactJS, with terrible JavaScript and absolutely no explanation on why things are being designed that way.

You want a review in a single phrase? Ok, that phrase would be "stay away from this book".
379 reviews10 followers
October 1, 2016
Forse il peggior libro che abbia letto quest'anno.

Tanto per cominciare non parla assolutamente di Reactive Programming, ma solo di ReactJS, e neanche tanto.

Due terzi abbondanti del libro sono un'analisi critica degli scritti di Douglas Crockford. O meglio, di 4 o 5 paragrafi dei suoi libri, ripetuti fino alla nausea.

Quando cita Immutable.js, che avrebbe qualche funzionalità reactive, si limita a riportare la lista delle funzioni, senza spiegare niente.

Le spiegazioni su ReactJS sono al limite del comprensibile, e il codice è tra i peggiori che abbia mai visto in vita mia. Sembra che abbia preso pessimo codice scritto per jQuery e l'abbia infilato dentro la funzione render() di un paio di componenti. God-components, tra l'altro, che nemmeno sfruttano la modularità di ReactJS.

Da dimenticare.
Profile Image for Hays Hutton.
9 reviews1 follower
September 16, 2015
parts were good. the parts i liked were more about computer programming history. i didn't care for the code examples (which were long and involved for their value)
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