JavaScript on things : hacking hardware for web developers / Lyza Danger Gardner.
By: Gardner, Lyza Danger [author.].
Publisher: Shelter Island, NY : Manning Publications Co., ©2018Description: xx, 426 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781617293863.Subject(s): Embedded computer systems -- Programming | JavaScript (Computer program language) | Embedded computer systems -- Programming | JavaScript (Computer program language)Genre/Form: Print books.Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | TK7895.E42 G37 2018 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU00000000013305 |
Browsing Alfaisal University Shelves , Shelving location: On Shelf Close shelf browser
TK7895 .E42 B35 2016 Embedded systems : ARM programming and optimization / | TK7895 .E42 B365 2022 System firmware an essential guide to open source and embedded solutions | TK7895.E42 E535 2014 Embedded and networking systems : design, software, and implementation / | TK7895.E42 G37 2018 JavaScript on things : hacking hardware for web developers / | TK7895.E43 B44 2015 Collaborative internet of things (C-IOT) : for future smart connected life and business / | TK7895.E43 G74 2015 The internet of things / | TK7895.E43 G74 2021 The internet of things / |
Includes index.
Part 1. A JavaScripter's introduction to hardware. Bringing JavaScript and hardware together -- Embarking on hardware with Arduino -- How to build circuits -- Part 2. Project basics : input and output with Johnny-Five. Sensors and input -- Output : making things happen -- Output : making things move -- Part 3. More sophisticated projects. Serial communication -- Projects without wires -- Building your own thing -- Part 4. Using JavaScript with hardware in other environments. JavaScript and constrained hardware -- Building with Node.js and tiny computers -- In the cloud, in the browser, and beyond.
JavaScript on Things is your first step into the exciting and downright entertaining world of programming for small electronics. If you know enough JavaScript to hack a website together, you'll be making things go bleep, blink, and spin faster than you can say "nodebot." -- Provided by publisher