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'''JavaScript''' is a scripting language introduced by the [[Netscape]] Corporation in 1996. It is by now the standard scripting language for the Web. | |||
The name JavaScript is an attempt to leech onto the hype that surrounded [[Java]] at the time the language was released. It has no connection with Java at all except that Sun (owners of the Java trademark) gave permission to use the Java name. 1996 really was the year of Java and there were lots of tools that added Java to their name and the fledging Linux operating system started to use a penguin as its mascot in the same year, aping "Duke" the penguin Java mascot that seemed to be virtually everywhere at the time. | |||
==OS/2 Implementations== | |||
* [[Netscape Navigator]] | |||
* [[Netscape Communicator]] | |||
==WinOS/2 Implementations== | |||
* Netscape Navigator | |||
==Publications== | |||
* Marc Johnson: ''JavaScript Manual of Style'' - Ziff-Davis Press 1996, ISBN 1-56276-423-3 | |||
* Mark Reynolds, Andrew Wooldridge: ''Using JavaScript'' - Que 1996, ISBN 0-7897-0789-6 | |||
[[Category:ECMAScript]] |
Revision as of 18:15, 27 February 2018
JavaScript is a scripting language introduced by the Netscape Corporation in 1996. It is by now the standard scripting language for the Web.
The name JavaScript is an attempt to leech onto the hype that surrounded Java at the time the language was released. It has no connection with Java at all except that Sun (owners of the Java trademark) gave permission to use the Java name. 1996 really was the year of Java and there were lots of tools that added Java to their name and the fledging Linux operating system started to use a penguin as its mascot in the same year, aping "Duke" the penguin Java mascot that seemed to be virtually everywhere at the time.
OS/2 Implementations
WinOS/2 Implementations
- Netscape Navigator
Publications
- Marc Johnson: JavaScript Manual of Style - Ziff-Davis Press 1996, ISBN 1-56276-423-3
- Mark Reynolds, Andrew Wooldridge: Using JavaScript - Que 1996, ISBN 0-7897-0789-6