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A Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript. The new tech-assisted approach that requires half the effort F First Edition Used

4.6 out of 5 stars 2,970 ratings

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Learning JavaScript is hell because of two problems.
I remove the problems, and you start having fun.

The first problem is retention. You remember only ten or twenty percent of what you read. That spells failure. To become fluent in a computer language, you have to retain pretty much everything.

How can you retain everything? Only by constantly being asked to play everything back. That's why people use flashcards. But my system does flashcards one better. After reading a short chapter, you go to my website and complete twenty interactive exercises. Algorithms check your work to make sure you know what you think you know. When you stumble, you do the exercise again. You keep trying until you know the chapter cold. The exercises are free.

The second problem is comprehension. Many learners hit a wall when they try to understand advanced concepts like variable scope and prototypes. Unfortunately, they blame themselves. That's why the Dummies books sell so well. But the fault lies with the authors, coding virtuosos who lack teaching talent. I'm the opposite of the typical software book author. I'll never code fast enough to land a job at Google. But I can teach.

Anyway, most comprehension problems are just retention problems in disguise. If you get lost trying to understand variable scope, it's because you don't remember how functions work. Thanks to the interactive exercises on my website, you'll always understand and remember everything necessary to confidently tackle the next concept.

"I've signed up to a few sites like Udemy, Codecademy, FreeCodeCamp, Lynda, YouTube videos, even searched on Coursera but nothing seemed to work for me. This book takes only 10 minutes each chapter and after that, you can exercise what you've just learned right away!" —Amazon reviewer Constanza Morales

Better than just reading. And more fun.

You'll spend two to three times as much time practicing as reading. It's how you wind up satisfied, confident, and proud, instead of confused, discouraged, and defeated. And since many people find doing things more enjoyable than reading things, it can be a pleasure to learn this way, quite apart from the impressive results you achieve.

"Very effective and fun." —Amazon reviewer A. Bergamini

Written especially for beginners.

I wrote the book and exercises especially for people who are new to programming. Making no assumptions about what you already know, I walk you through JavaScript slowly, patiently. I explain every little thing in sixth-grade English. I avoid unnecessary technical jargon like the plague. (Face it, fellow authors, it is the plague.)

"The layman syntax he uses...makes it much easier to suddenly realize a concept that seemed abstract and too hard to wrap your head around is suddenly not complicated at all." — Amazon reviewer IMHO

The exercises keep you focused, give you extra practice where you're shaky, and prepare you for each next step. Every lesson is built on top of a solid foundation that you and I have carefully constructed. Each individual step is small. But, as Amazon reviewer James Toban says, when you get to the end of the book, you've built "a tower of JavaScript."

If you're an accomplished programmer already, my book may be too elementary for you. (Do you really need to be told what a variable is?) But if you're new to programming, more than a thousand five-star reviews are pretty good evidence that my book may be just the one to get you coding JavaScript successfully.

"Mark Myers' method of getting what can be...difficult information into a format that makes it exponentially easier to consume, truly understand, and synthesize into real-world application is beyond anything I've encountered before." —Amazon reviewer Jason A. Ruby

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

A few years ago I set out to teach myself JavaScript by reading programming books. It was such a struggle that I decided I must have lost some learning ability over the years. Then it hit me... I wasn't a bad learner. The books were bad teachers! I fought my way through a dozen books, and by brute effort, learned JavaScript. But I had to design exercises for myself. Without practice, I couldn't retain anything. JavaScript, I learned, isn't that hard. The books make it hard. So I wrote a book that makes JavaScript easy. And, since exercises are the only way to make the knowledge stick, I programmed 1,750 of them for you. I'm a former lecturer in the Communications School of Boston University. I hold an A.B. from Harvard. My professional focus is on using technology to reduce the effort and tedium of learning, primarily through interactivity. I'm developing the "A Smarter Way to Learn" series on programming, a collection of instructional books paired with online interactive exercises. I run the website http: //www.ASmarterWayToLearn.com. Along with my wife Judy and our two politically-active cats, I live in Taos, NM, where I cook under the ghostly supervision of Marcella Hazan, read extensively, play showboat frisbee once a week, and long for more episodes of "Breaking Bad."

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 20, 2014
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ F First Edition Used
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 254 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1497408180
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1497408180
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.45 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7 x 0.58 x 10 inches
  • Book 1 of 3 ‏ : ‎ A Smarter Way to Learn
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 2,970 ratings

About the author

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Mark Myers
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When I got into the authoring business twelve years ago, I'd been a newspaper reporter, advertising executive, and lecturer in communications at Boston University. I'd spent my life making things easy to understand and, if possible, entertaining.

What's more, I understood learning. It's what got me through Harvard, cum laude, with a minimum of effort.

As a dedicated home cook who owned a hundred cookbooks, I knew that even the great Julia Child couldn't transfer her skills to me through the written word. I had to practice.

With this background and years of coding experience as a computer enthusiast, I felt I was the right guy to reinvent the computer language book.

My learner-friendly teaching approach, put to the test in my Smarter Way to Learn series, has accumulated more than four thousand five-star reviews on Amazon—a record for books in this category.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
2,970 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this JavaScript learning book effective, appreciating its one-of-a-kind approach that breaks material down into bite-sized chapters, with each lesson building on the last. Moreover, the book includes a huge cache of interactive practice exercises that take one concept at a time, making the learning process both fun and easy to digest. Additionally, customers value the book's thoughtfully organized structure and consider it worth the price.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

1,218 customers mention "Ease of learning"1,130 positive88 negative

Customers appreciate the book's approach to teaching JavaScript, noting its one-of-a-kind learning system that breaks material down and explains concepts clearly. One customer mentions that answers to exercises are readily available for reference.

"...in blanks with key words and ending up with writing and running actual code snippets. They seduce you with a rapid start and positive reinforcement...." Read more

"...I am very enthusiastic about learning coding this way, as an older person who has an in-born love for computer programming but is intimidated by the..." Read more

"...What "A Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript" does that most other programming books and online resources fail to do is present the..." Read more

"...Despite these criticisms, Mr. Myers has done a very good job building a JavaScript resource about which he should be very proud." Read more

184 customers mention "Chapter length"172 positive12 negative

Customers appreciate the book's chapter length, which is divided into very small sections that take 5-15 minutes to read.

"...As this book is quite long and in depth aside from that, I'm not sure how much more getting deeper into RegEx would've extended this book...." Read more

"...The longest lesson was 3 pages. Very doable in a quick sitting...." Read more

"...Each chapter is short and you spend most of your time doing exercises. No environment to setup and no error ridden code to copy...." Read more

"...I also like that the chapters are short; I'm able to block an hour out of my day and read through a chapter PLUS take the practice exam...." Read more

172 customers mention "Interactiveness"172 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the interactive exercises in the book, which make the learning process more engaging and fun.

"...You'll have fun, improve reading comprehension, memory, reasoning, typing accuracy and speed. For some parts you'll need a little HTML...." Read more

"...It's fulfilling and a fun way to learn and actually get to write the code regularly so that it really sticks...and you need to learn the syntax..." Read more

"...It was fun and interactive, and it also explained everything pretty well. It went a little more in depth on many topics I was confused with...." Read more

"...Every bite-sized chapter comes with 20 online interactive exercises to work with the syntax, methods, and concepts introduced... this is the..." Read more

78 customers mention "Ease of digest"78 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very easy to consume, with a user-friendly website interface that's not overwhelming.

"...The longest lesson was 3 pages. Very doable in a quick sitting...." Read more

"...He does an amazing job breaking down Javascript into parts that are easily and fully understood...." Read more

"...As most of the book reviews state, it is separated into small, digestible parts, and the online exercises are fantastic at reiterating the..." Read more

"...There's even timed statement-writing exercises, easy snippets that are really doable. So don't forget that damn semicolon for each statement, LOL...." Read more

77 customers mention "Value for money"77 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be worth the price and consider it an incredible investment, with one customer describing it as "worth its weight in gold."

"...consider that getting this book in Kindle, e-reader format is so very inexpensive..." Read more

"...This is the best money I've spent on any learning material in a long time. Thank you to the author." Read more

"...Take a break. Rinse and repeat. And you cannot go wrong at the low price." Read more

"...reviews on this book and thought I'd give it a shot since the price was so low; I figured I had nothing to lose! I am not disappointed!!..." Read more

74 customers mention "Build-on"56 positive18 negative

Customers appreciate how the book's lessons are structured, with each building on the previous one and being bite-sized, and one customer notes that the end-of-chapter quizzes help reinforce the material.

"...fail to do is present the learning in a manner that builds on previous lessons. An example: the very first lesson covers alerts...." Read more

"...Each chapter logically builds on previous chapters. The tecnnique is simple. Read (<10 mins), do the exercises (<25 mins), take a walk...." Read more

"...So, the exercises note your mistakes and bring you back to have a chance to get the same, or similar, exercise correct...." Read more

"...This was particularly frustrating in that latter chapters, where the code can be a little more complex...." Read more

65 customers mention "Interactive exercises"52 positive13 negative

Customers appreciate the book's interactive exercises, which include a huge cache of practice activities and are structured to be repetitive, with one customer noting the book comes with over 1700 exercises.

"...The format of the exercises is varied which serves to keep your interest up and the positive feedback makes them like eating potato chips - hard to..." Read more

"...Hands-down! I really appreciate how cleanly the chapters, and exercises are laid out and chunked perfectly for 20-30 minute sit-downs...." Read more

"...I love how he reviews the chapter and then challenges you in a couple of different ways.. good stuff!..." Read more

"...1. Some of the exercises reject completely functional, valid JavaScript--even answers that are seemingly indistinguishable from that which the..." Read more

40 customers mention "Organization"37 positive3 negative

Customers appreciate the book's organization, describing it as thoughtfully structured with a comfortable order of concepts that build upon each other.

"...Mark Myers uses effective techniques such as short, very short, lessons and interactive exercises that build good coding habits and increase..." Read more

"...Mark Myers did an excellent job when structuring this book and its contents, which includes FREE lessons at the end of each chapter...." Read more

"...that the information is solid and the way it is presented and organized makes sense, mostly..." Read more

"...Because of the organization, clear communication and most of all the online component of this system, this is the best book I have ever bought...." Read more

I cautiously recommend this book.  THE ONLINE EXERCISES BADLY NEED ERROR REPORTING OR PROOFREADING.
3 out of 5 stars
I cautiously recommend this book. THE ONLINE EXERCISES BADLY NEED ERROR REPORTING OR PROOFREADING.
Update: I am up to chapter 45 in the book now. I've pasted an extremely simple code snippet where my answer does not deviate from the Author's yet it is marked incorrect. I am basically checking all of my own answers at this point and do not believe the online exercises because there are multiple -- sometimes up to 6 -- errors per chapter. It's only usable if you fend for yourself. In the examples below, the first was marked wrong because the Author inccorectly put the word "or" in his correct answer. I've pasted the author's full answer with "or" (which is not a legal javascript keyword so it wouldn't run) and only that was accepted as correct. In the second example, there is nothing wrong. My spaces, caps, and everything are perfect, but it wasn't accepted as correct. Annoying. Before I bought this book, I was copying coding exercises online unsure what the semicolon might be doing in a particular statement or why there were empty parentheses after some statements and not others, and crucially I didn't know what words were keywords to javascript and which weren't. It was easy to confuse keywords with variables and constants in tutorials because I wasn't given the background to know what was what. I was told I would learn simply by coding and the syntax would come to me as I coded more. It did, but only in a way where I could read the code and not write it. Enter A Smarter Way to Learn Javascript. I won't repeat the premise of the book as so many have already elaborated on the coding sandbox from which to learn, how it's sensitive to spaces, etc etc. I will however bring up one thing which I haven't seen for some reason in other reviews, it's this: THERE ARE JUST ENOUGH ERRORS IN THE CODING EXERCISES TO MAKE YOU WANT TO THROW YOUR MOUSE ACROSS THE ROOM. Still, the book delivers on its promise, albeit in a flawed way. Some of these errors by the way, I am 100% sure I'm not wrong because I pasted the authors own code into the answer input and they were still marked wrong. They start around chapter 20. I'm not looking forward to the even more in depth chapters where things get even more complex and their is more probability for errors. Tempted to rate 3 stars, but won't since the value of the book is still very high despite it's extremely frustrating mistakes. Fix it up Mark!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2014
    This training technology (it's much more than a book) probably was targeted at web developers and it's great for them but it has far wider applicability.

    Beginners: Kids, I am your grandfather, a card carrying Mensan, and have been in information technology since before your parents were born, *stop reading* come back when you've completed the 'A Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript" that I gave you.

    Senior Citizens: Stop wasting time with "brain training". Learn something useful while training AND acquire a new opportunity for self expression. You'll have fun, improve reading comprehension, memory, reasoning, typing accuracy and speed. For some parts you'll need a little HTML. Someone should write a one page HTML cheat sheet specific to the course.

    Lynda.com: Immediately purchase Mark for an obscene amount of money and we can all say we knew him when.

    The rest of you: Mark Myers has done something great here. He has applied some sound psychological principles to teach practical JavaScript programming.

    Why do you care? Add "these few precepts in thy memory": JavaScript started off as Brendan Eich's simple, quick effort to provide web site scripting. It is now a monster probably accounting for more lines of code than any other language and is best described by David Flanagan's 1078 pages of "JavaScript: The Definitive Guide". You probably aren't going to go cover-to-cover with that tome but, if you're serious, you should own a copy. JavaScript has been taken over by a standards body and is called ECMAScript 5 with ECMAScript 6 soon to be released. People are cross compiling other languages into JavaScript. Browsers run it so efficiently that first person shooters have been written in JavaScript. "It's alive!" AND evolving.

    Of course Mark doesn't teach the whole thing. It probably wouldn't even be advisable - see Douglas Crockford's, "JavaScript: The Good Parts", the other book you really should own to get into JavaScript.

    No, Mark restricted himself to more what Brendan's bosses probably had in mind when they tasked him with coming up with a web scripting language. It's not all you need but it's a real good start. This is not a text to read. It is not a reference.

    A Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript is a training system for a useable subset of JavaScript. It consists of 89, two to three page Chapters. Carefully read the Chapter - there *will* be a quiz. Each topic chapter is matched with 20 exercises on the web site. The exercises are where you'll spend the most time. They create a graduated involvement in producing code starting with filling in blanks with key words and ending up with writing and running actual code snippets. They seduce you with a rapid start and positive reinforcement. This is experiential learning by guided doing and will require effort on your part to carefully read the exercise, to understand the point the author is making and then verify your comprehension by completing the exercise task - usually a line or two of code . There is new info in the exercises; they do not merely cover what's in the text. The format of the exercises is varied which serves to keep your interest up and the positive feedback makes them like eating potato chips - hard to stop with just one. Don't try, do. Encouraging words and a green background added to your answer become rewards you'll seek. If you're wrong, learn from it. It may stick with you longer and you'll get a chance to redeem yourself as you complete the exercises. I worked every one of them - some are real puzzlers requiring brain power beyond rote memory. Keep the big picture in mind and go for simple solutions.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2018
    I have previously reviewed Mark's HTML/CSS book which I had to learn in tandem while learning JavaScript in this book. I am very enthusiastic about learning coding this way, as an older person who has an in-born love for computer programming but is intimidated by the thought of having to try to remember things I've learned (not nearly as easy to do as when I was young).

    Since I have now gotten used to the general concepts of coding that cross platforms (I have now learned some PHP at free sites online, also with a PHP/MySQL book purchased from Amazon, and am now also working my way through Mark's Python book), I realize even more how helpful teaching like this is for either beginners or someone like me who learned some programming languages long ago but needed a reboot having forgotten much of what I'd originally learned. Mark uses the same type of starting examples across his different books, they are simple to understand and he starts out very easy, plainly laid out so that you are able to grasp the underlying mechanisms at play.

    One thing to note is he doesn't get into any detail about regular expressions. In the chapter that touches on it, he openly expresses that. As I'm here to learn how to fluently code with confidence, at first I was a little concerned about this, but there are places I can find online to go into further depth on this subject, which sounds a little confusing. As this book is quite long and in depth aside from that, I'm not sure how much more getting deeper into RegEx would've extended this book. So, when you consider that getting this book in Kindle, e-reader format is so very inexpensive (you just download the Amazon reader app to your computer and start working on it through there, the links at the end of the chapters will open your browser to practice what you just learned), a person can easily afford other teaching materials to go into more depth on that subject if you so desired.

    Having looked at some other reviews of the chapter practice sessions, I feel the need to state that I've never had an issue with any of the peculiarities of learning code this way. The author has to structure the practices with precise number of spaces in certain areas, etc., as this is an automated system, not an AI system, of checking what you entered to see if it's a workable way of completing the required task, so the rigidness of the practice is necessary. It's the short chapters and immediate, multiple question practice that is the overwhelming strength of this book. I can't really imagine a different way now that I've tried this way.

    Originally I had tried taking lots of notes (to help my old memory) and then doing the practice at the end of each chapter. I realized at one point about halfway through this book that I had to go through the HTML/CSS book in order to be able to work with JavaScript for webpages. Once I finished that book, I went back through the first JavaScript chapters again rapid-fire, because I'd already lost some confidence in my memory of what I'd already learned with JavaScript (kids out there, getting old sucks that way!). That way of going through the book works really well, I found (that's how I am now going through Mark's Python book). I also discovered that I did in fact retain more than I believed I did, this way of learning truly works!
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2024
    I have been trying to teach myself Javascript for a while now. The problem I keep running into is, most of the tutorials, books and courses are written for people that already understand the material, or basic programming. Another problem is the other courses give you lots of information, but no lessons so you can put what you have studied to work. This book is different. It's written in a way that is understandable, without talking down to the reader. Also, as the lessons become more advanced, it continually introduces elements of earlier lessons, so you don't have to re-learn the things you learned before.
    I am so impressed with this teaching material, that I am taking time from one of my learning sessions, just to write this review. This is the best money I've spent on any learning material in a long time.

    Thank you to the author.
    One person found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Mac
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book for learning Java
    Reviewed in Canada on September 29, 2024
    It contains good information and the online exercises are fun. This is also great for those on a tight schedule.
    Customer image
    Mac
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Excellent book for learning Java

    Reviewed in Canada on September 29, 2024
    It contains good information and the online exercises are fun. This is also great for those on a tight schedule.
    Images in this review
    Customer imageCustomer image
  • フレデリック
    5.0 out of 5 stars I learn by doing, this is the best method I have found.
    Reviewed in Japan on July 23, 2021
    After trying online classes, tutorials and other books; I have found this resource to get me off the ground when it comes to Javascript programming. The chapters are very short and east to assimilate. The online practice at first seems overly picky (when it comes to semantic) but it has a great purpose. I do and redo the exercises until i get them right.
    I can not recommend this book enough to those who want to try their hands at programming.
  • ottik
    5.0 out of 5 stars Genial, kann ich jedem empfehlen.
    Reviewed in Germany on February 23, 2024
    Das Buch ist so aufgebaut das man von Anfang an alles von Grund auf ausarbeitet, jeder kann mit diesem Buch Javascript lernen.
    Report
  • dante
    5.0 out of 5 stars quick and effective
    Reviewed in Italy on February 15, 2015
    Quick. Effective. Ready to learn? GO! Much more than a book. I found it really useful. I'm learning fast and furious.
  • Burial
    5.0 out of 5 stars Parfait pour un débutant
    Reviewed in France on December 16, 2018
    Suite à une formation vidéo un peu floue sur javascript, j'ai acheté ce livre sur Kindle ( moins de 7 euros ) car il avait énormément d'avis positifs sur amazon.com.
    Je ne suis pas déçu. L'auteur est extrêmement clair et vous fait avancer pas à pas dans la pratique de javascript.
    Mais la cerise sur le gâteau ce sont les super exercices accessibles sur son blog, via un lien fourni à chaque fin de chapitre (parfois, 20 exercices pour 2 pages de théorie ! ).
    Exercices chronométrés, théoriques et répétitifs, corrigés immédiatement afin de bien retenir et appliquer ce que l'on vient de lire dans le bouquin. Un très bon livre motivant pour un prix dérisoire !