In this JavaScript article tutorial, we're together to enjoy awesome experiments on HTML5 with new hot JavaScript APIs. With a lot of JavaScript/Web application live demos in this JavaScript HTML5 tutorial, we can learn:
- New JavaScript selectors, JavaScript CSS selectors, jQuery selectors to select HTML elements better.
- New Web storage function and new Web SQL database storage.
- New API for caching offline application data, cache JavaScript files
- How to use Web workers and Web sockets.
- Geolocation API
- Audio, Video and Canvas manipulation on HTML5.
That's so cool! HTML5 is really new cool web technology, supported by many giant web/internet companies. Try it, master it now asap.
- Demo
- Enlarge
- Reload
- New window
Generate your business videos by AI with voice or just text
Your first FREE AI Video App! Automate Your First AI Video. Create Your Professional Video In 5 Minutes By AI No Equipment Or Video Editing Skill Requred. Effortless Video Production For Content Marketers.
HTML5 has a lot of new features. There's new HTML, CSS and, of course, JavaScript. Officially HTML5 specification and implementation won't be ready until 2022. Personally I don't believe in this. Majority of JavaScript features described further are already implemented in modern browsers (e.g. Sarafi, Chrome, Firefox, Opera). Even Internet Explorer gained capability to render canvas and other stuff (supposing we use ExplorerCanvas or Chrome Frame). Take a closer look at what's going to make your live better and happier :
New Selectors
How many times have you wondered why there's getElementById, getElementsByTagName, but there is not getElementByClassName? New JavaScript API solves this issue:
var elements = document.getElementsByClassName('entry');
Moreover there's now possibility to fetch elements that match provided CSS syntax!
var elements = document.querySelectorAll("ul li:nth-child(odd)");
var first_td = document.querySelector("table.test > tr > td");
Web Storage
Cookie mechanism has some disadvantages. As W3C said:
- A user could be buying plane tickets in two different windows, using the same site. If the site used cookies to keep track of which ticket the user was buying, then as the user clicked from page to page in both windows, the ticket currently being purchased would "leak" from one window to the other, potentially causing the user to buy two tickets for the same flight without really noticing.
- Web applications may wish to store megabytes of user data, such as entire user-authored documents or a user's mailbox, on the client side for performance reasons. Again, cookies do not handle this case well, because they are transmitted with every request.
Well, sessionStorage has been created to let developers cope with first of above troubles. It keeps data in per tab storage. To get along with second one, W3C has introduced localStorage - the persistent storage that never expires.
Look, how simple is saving draft every new character is pressed:
textarea.addEventListener('keyup', function () {
window.localStorage['value'] = area.value;
window.localStorage['timestamp'] = (new Date()).getTime();
}, false);
textarea.value = window.localStorage['value'];
Web SQL Database Storage
What about database accessible directly from JavaScript? Since now we no longer parse, sort, filter data using consuming-lot-of-memory-and-cpu JavaScript loops. We fetch data using well know SQL queries. Look at example:
var db = window.openDatabase("Database Name", "Database Version");
db.transaction(function(tx) {
tx.executeSql("SELECT * FROM test", [], successCallback, errorCallback);
});
Database is stored on client's computer so it's secure.
Offline Application Cache API
Web SQL Storage is available even if client went offline. But if we want create fully-functional offline aplication, we must care about resources like images, CSS, JS and et caetera. It's high time to familiarize with Application Cache API.
We create cache.manifest file and link to it from html element.
<html manifest="cache.manifest">
File must be served with text/cache-manifest mimetype and contain body like this:
CACHE MANIFEST
CACHE:
index.html
help.html
style/default.css
images/logo.png
images/backgound.png
NETWORK:
server.cgi
Files listed below CACHE will be cached by browser and available even offline. Files listed after NETWORK are never going to be cached. The application cache automatically updates only if the manifest file changes. It does not automatically update if resources listed in the manifest file change. You may do it manually with JavaScript:
cache = window.applicationCache;
var cacheUpdatereadyListener = function() {
// Swap cache with updated data
cache.swapCache();
}
cache.addEventListener('updateready', cacheUpdatereadyListener, false);
if(cache.status == cache.UPDATEREADY) {
// Update cached data and call updateready listener after
cache.update();
}
You may find full list of Application Cache Event Listeners here.
There is also new window event handler: onOffline. It is fired when internet connection goes down and up . See how we may notice user if there's change in user's network connection:
window.addEventListener('offline', function() {
if(navigator.onLine == false) {
alert('We went offline');
} else {
alert('We are online again!');
}
}, true);
- Sent (0)
- New