Difference between revisions of "JavaScript"

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[[JavaScript]] (also known by its acronym [[JS]]; hereinafter, ''JS'') is the [[programming language]] that serves as the cornerstone for the [[World Wide Web]] ([[World Wide Web|WWW]]). To display any [[webpage]] that belongs to [[World Wide Web|WWW]], nearly every [[web browser]] and every major [[web browser]] provides support to three [[webpage language]]s. [[HTML]] is a [[markup language]] that forms the webpage skeleton, [[CSS]] is a [[style-sheet language]] that allows for graphic consistency throughout a number of pages, and ''JS'' makes everything that the first two cannot. That "everything" includes changing [[HTML]] and/or [[CSS]].
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[[JavaScript]] (also known by its acronym [[JS]]; hereinafter, ''JS'') is the [[programming language]] that serves as the cornerstone for the [[World Wide Web]] ([[World Wide Web|WWW]]). To display any [[webpage]] that belongs to [[World Wide Web|WWW]], nearly every [[web browser]] and every major [[web browser]] provides support to three [[webpage language]]s. [[HTML]] is a [[markup language]] that forms the webpage skeleton, [[CSS]] is a [[style-sheet language]] that allows for graphic consistency throughout a number of pages, and ''JS'' makes everything that the first two cannot. That "everything" includes overriding of [[HTML]] and/or [[CSS]].
  
 
''JS'' conforms to the [[ECMAScript]] specification.
 
''JS'' conforms to the [[ECMAScript]] specification.

Revision as of 20:18, 20 October 2023

JavaScript (also known by its acronym JS; hereinafter, JS) is the programming language that serves as the cornerstone for the World Wide Web (WWW). To display any webpage that belongs to WWW, nearly every web browser and every major web browser provides support to three webpage languages. HTML is a markup language that forms the webpage skeleton, CSS is a style-sheet language that allows for graphic consistency throughout a number of pages, and JS makes everything that the first two cannot. That "everything" includes overriding of HTML and/or CSS.

JS conforms to the ECMAScript specification.