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JavaScript Interview Questions & Answers

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Table of Contents

| No. | Questions | | --- | --------- | | 1 | [What are the possible ways to create objects in JavaScript](#what-are-the-possible-ways-to-create-objects-in-javascript) | | 2 | [What is a prototype chain](#what-is-a-prototype-chain) | | 3 | [What is the difference between Call, Apply and Bind](#what-is-the-difference-between-call-apply-and-bind) | | 4 | [What is JSON and its common operations](#what-is-json-and-its-common-operations) | | 5 | [What is the purpose of the array slice method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-array-slice-method) | | 6 | [What is the purpose of the array splice method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-array-splice-method) | | 7 | [What is the difference between slice and splice](#what-is-the-difference-between-slice-and-splice) | | 8 | [How do you compare Object and Map](#how-do-you-compare-object-and-map) | | 9 | [What is the difference between == and === operators](#what-is-the-difference-between--and--operators) | | 10 | [What are lambda expressions or arrow functions](#what-are-lambda-expressions-or-arrow-functions) | | 11 | [What is a first class function](#what-is-a-first-class-function) | | 12 | [What is a first order function](#what-is-a-first-order-function) | | 13 | [What is a higher order function](#what-is-a-higher-order-function) | | 14 | [What is a unary function](#what-is-a-unary-function) | | 15 | [What is the currying function](#what-is-the-currying-function) | | 16 | [What is a pure function](#what-is-a-pure-function) | | 17 | [What is the purpose of the let keyword](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-let-keyword) | | 18 | [What is the difference between let and var](#what-is-the-difference-between-let-and-var) | | 19 | [What is the reason to choose the name let as a keyword](#what-is-the-reason-to-choose-the-name-let-as-a-keyword) | | 20 | [How do you redeclare variables in a switch block without an error](#how-do-you-redeclare-variables-in-a-switch-block-without-an-error) | | 21 | [What is the Temporal Dead Zone](#what-is-the-temporal-dead-zone) | | 22 | [What is an IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression)](#what-is-an-iife-immediately-invoked-function-expression) | | 23 | [How do you decode or encode a URL in JavaScript?](#how-do-you-decode-or-encode-a-url-in-javascript) | | 24 | [What is memoization](#what-is-memoization) | | 25 | [What is Hoisting](#what-is-hoisting) | | 26 | [What are classes in ES6](#what-are-classes-in-es6) | | 27 | [What are closures](#what-are-closures) | | 28 | [What are modules](#what-are-modules) | | 29 | [Why do you need modules](#why-do-you-need-modules) | | 30 | [What is scope in javascript](#what-is-scope-in-javascript) | | 31 | [What is a service worker](#what-is-a-service-worker) | | 32 | [How do you manipulate DOM using a service worker](#how-do-you-manipulate-dom-using-a-service-worker) | | 33 | [How do you reuse information across service worker restarts](#how-do-you-reuse-information-across-service-worker-restarts) | | 34 | [What is IndexedDB](#what-is-indexeddb) | | 35 | [What is web storage](#what-is-web-storage) | | 36 | [What is a post message](#what-is-a-post-message) | | 37 | [What is a Cookie](#what-is-a-cookie) | | 38 | [Why do you need a Cookie](#why-do-you-need-a-cookie) | | 39 | [What are the options in a cookie](#what-are-the-options-in-a-cookie) | | 40 | [How do you delete a cookie](#how-do-you-delete-a-cookie) | | 41 | [What are the differences between cookie, local storage and session storage](#what-are-the-differences-between-cookie-local-storage-and-session-storage) | | 42 | [What is the main difference between localStorage and sessionStorage](#what-is-the-main-difference-between-localstorage-and-sessionstorage) | | 43 | [How do you access web storage](#how-do-you-access-web-storage) | | 44 | [What are the methods available on session storage](#what-are-the-methods-available-on-session-storage) | | 45 | [What is a storage event and its event handler](#what-is-a-storage-event-and-its-event-handler) | | 46 | [Why do you need web storage](#why-do-you-need-web-storage) | | 47 | [How do you check web storage browser support](#how-do-you-check-web-storage-browser-support) | | 48 | [How do you check web workers browser support](#how-do-you-check-web-workers-browser-support) | | 49 | [Give an example of a web worker](#give-an-example-of-a-web-worker) | | 50 | [What are the restrictions of web workers on DOM](#what-are-the-restrictions-of-web-workers-on-dom) | | 51 | [What is a promise](#what-is-a-promise) | | 52 | [Why do you need a promise](#why-do-you-need-a-promise) | | 53 | [What are the three states of promise](#what-are-the-three-states-of-promise) | | 54 | [What is a callback function](#what-is-a-callback-function) | | 55 | [Why do we need callbacks](#why-do-we-need-callbacks) | | 56 | [What is a callback hell](#what-is-a-callback-hell) | | 57 | [What are server-sent events](#what-are-server-sent-events) | | 58 | [How do you receive server-sent event notifications](#how-do-you-receive-server-sent-event-notifications) | | 59 | [How do you check browser support for server-sent events](#how-do-you-check-browser-support-for-server-sent-events) | | 60 | [What are the events available for server sent events](#what-are-the-events-available-for-server-sent-events) | | 61 | [What are the main rules of promise](#what-are-the-main-rules-of-promise) | | 62 | [What is callback in callback](#what-is-callback-in-callback) | | 63 | [What is promise chaining](#what-is-promise-chaining) | | 64 | [What is promise.all](#what-is-promiseall) | | 65 | [What is the purpose of the race method in promise](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-race-method-in-promise) | | 66 | [What is a strict mode in javascript](#what-is-a-strict-mode-in-javascript) | | 67 | [Why do you need strict mode](#why-do-you-need-strict-mode) | | 68 | [How do you declare strict mode](#how-do-you-declare-strict-mode) | | 69 | [What is the purpose of double exclamation](#what-is-the-purpose-of-double-exclamation) | | 70 | [What is the purpose of the delete operator](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-delete-operator) | | 71 | [What is typeof operator](#what-is-typeof-operator) | | 72 | [What is undefined property](#what-is-undefined-property) | | 73 | [What is null value](#what-is-null-value) | | 74 | [What is the difference between null and undefined](#what-is-the-difference-between-null-and-undefined) | | 75 | [What is eval](#what-is-eval) | | 76 | [What is the difference between window and document](#what-is-the-difference-between-window-and-document) | | 77 | [How do you access history in javascript](#how-do-you-access-history-in-javascript) | | 78 | [How do you detect caps lock key turned on or not](#how-do-you-detect-caps-lock-key-turned-on-or-not) | | 79 | [What is isNaN](#what-is-isnan) | | 80 | [What are the differences between undeclared and undefined variables](#what-are-the-differences-between-undeclared-and-undefined-variables) | | 81 | [What are global variables](#what-are-global-variables) | | 82 | [What are the problems with global variables](#what-are-the-problems-with-global-variables) | | 83 | [What is NaN property](#what-is-nan-property) | | 84 | [What is the purpose of isFinite function](#what-is-the-purpose-of-isfinite-function) | | 85 | [What is an event flow](#what-is-an-event-flow) | | 86 | [What is event bubbling](#what-is-event-bubbling) | | 87 | [What is event capturing](#what-is-event-capturing) | | 88 | [How do you submit a form using JavaScript](#how-do-you-submit-a-form-using-javascript) | | 89 | [How do you find operating system details](#how-do-you-find-operating-system-details) | | 90 | [What is the difference between document load and DOMContentLoaded events](#what-is-the-difference-between-document-load-and-domcontentloaded-events) | | 91 | [What is the difference between native, host and user objects](#what-is-the-difference-between-native-host-and-user-objects) | | 92 | [What are the tools or techniques used for debugging JavaScript code](#what-are-the-tools-or-techniques-used-for-debugging-javascript-code) | | 93 | [What are the pros and cons of promises over callbacks](#what-are-the-pros-and-cons-of-promises-over-callbacks) | | 94 | [What is the difference between an attribute and a property](#what-is-the-difference-between-an-attribute-and-a-property) | | 95 | [What is same-origin policy](#what-is-same-origin-policy) | | 96 | [What is the purpose of void 0](#what-is-the-purpose-of-void-0) | | 97 | [Is JavaScript a compiled or interpreted language](#is-javascript-a-compiled-or-interpreted-language) | | 98 | [Is JavaScript a case-sensitive language](#is-javascript-a-case-sensitive-language) | | 99 | [Is there any relation between Java and JavaScript](#is-there-any-relation-between-java-and-javascript) | | 100 | [What are events](#what-are-events) | | 101 | [Who created javascript](#who-created-javascript) | | 102 | [What is the use of preventDefault method](#what-is-the-use-of-preventdefault-method) | | 103 | [What is the use of stopPropagation method](#what-is-the-use-of-stoppropagation-method) | | 104 | [What are the steps involved in return false usage](#what-are-the-steps-involved-in-return-false-usage) | | 105 | [What is BOM](#what-is-bom) | | 106 | [What is the use of setTimeout](#what-is-the-use-of-settimeout) | | 107 | [What is the use of setInterval](#what-is-the-use-of-setinterval) | | 108 | [Why is JavaScript treated as Single threaded](#why-is-javascript-treated-as-single-threaded) | | 109 | [What is an event delegation](#what-is-an-event-delegation) | | 110 | [What is ECMAScript](#what-is-ecmascript) | | 111 | [What is JSON](#what-is-json) | | 112 | [What are the syntax rules of JSON](#what-are-the-syntax-rules-of-json) | | 113 | [What is the purpose JSON stringify](#what-is-the-purpose-json-stringify) | | 114 | [How do you parse JSON string](#how-do-you-parse-json-string) | | 115 | [Why do you need JSON](#why-do-you-need-json) | | 116 | [What are PWAs](#what-are-pwas) | | 117 | [What is the purpose of clearTimeout method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-cleartimeout-method) | | 118 | [What is the purpose of clearInterval method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-clearinterval-method) | | 119 | [How do you redirect new page in javascript](#how-do-you-redirect-new-page-in-javascript) | | 120 | [How do you check whether a string contains a substring](#how-do-you-check-whether-a-string-contains-a-substring) | | 121 | [How do you validate an email in javascript](#how-do-you-validate-an-email-in-javascript) | | 122 | [How do you get the current url with javascript](#how-do-you-get-the-current-url-with-javascript) | | 123 | [What are the various url properties of location object](#what-are-the-various-url-properties-of-location-object) | | 124 | [How do get query string values in javascript](#how-do-get-query-string-values-in-javascript) | | 125 | [How do you check if a key exists in an object](#how-do-you-check-if-a-key-exists-in-an-object) | | 126 | [How do you loop through or enumerate javascript object](#how-do-you-loop-through-or-enumerate-javascript-object) | | 127 | [How do you test for an empty object](#how-do-you-test-for-an-empty-object) | | 128 | [What is an arguments object](#what-is-an-arguments-object) | | 129 | [How do you make first letter of the string in an uppercase](#how-do-you-make-first-letter-of-the-string-in-an-uppercase) | | 130 | [What are the pros and cons of for loops](#what-are-the-pros-and-cons-of-for-loops) | | 131 | [How do you display the current date in javascript](#how-do-you-display-the-current-date-in-javascript) | | 132 | [How do you compare two date objects](#how-do-you-compare-two-date-objects) | | 133 | [How do you check if a string starts with another string](#how-do-you-check-if-a-string-starts-with-another-string) | | 134 | [How do you trim a string in javascript](#how-do-you-trim-a-string-in-javascript) | | 135 | [How do you add a key value pair in javascript](#how-do-you-add-a-key-value-pair-in-javascript) | | 136 | [Is the !-- notation represents a special operator](#is-the----notation-represents-a-special-operator) | | 137 | [How do you assign default values to variables](#how-do-you-assign-default-values-to-variables) | | 138 | [How do you define multiline strings](#how-do-you-define-multiline-strings) | | 139 | [What is an app shell model](#what-is-an-app-shell-model) | | 140 | [Can we define properties for functions](#can-we-define-properties-for-functions) | | 141 | [What is the way to find the number of parameters expected by a function](#what-is-the-way-to-find-the-number-of-parameters-expected-by-a-function) | | 142 | [What is a polyfill](#what-is-a-polyfill) | | 143 | [What are break and continue statements](#what-are-break-and-continue-statements) | | 144 | [What are js labels](#what-are-js-labels) | | 145 | [What are the benefits of keeping declarations at the top](#what-are-the-benefits-of-keeping-declarations-at-the-top) | | 146 | [What are the benefits of initializing variables](#what-are-the-benefits-of-initializing-variables) | | 147 | [What are the recommendations to create new object](#what-are-the-recommendations-to-create-new-object) | | 148 | [How do you define JSON arrays](#how-do-you-define-json-arrays) | | 149 | [How do you generate random integers](#how-do-you-generate-random-integers) | | 150 | [Can you write a random integers function to print integers within a range](#can-you-write-a-random-integers-function-to-print-integers-within-a-range) | | 151 | [What is tree shaking](#what-is-tree-shaking) | | 152 | [What is the need of tree shaking](#what-is-the-need-of-tree-shaking) | | 153 | [Is it recommended to use eval](#is-it-recommended-to-use-eval) | | 154 | [What is a Regular Expression](#what-is-a-regular-expression) | | 155 | [What are the string methods that accept Regular expression](#what-are-the-string-methods-that-accept-regular-expression) | | 156 | [What are modifiers in regular expression](#what-are-modifiers-in-regular-expression) | | 157 | [What are regular expression patterns](#what-are-regular-expression-patterns) | | 158 | [What is a RegExp object](#what-is-a-regexp-object) | | 159 | [How do you search a string for a pattern](#how-do-you-search-a-string-for-a-pattern) | | 160 | [What is the purpose of exec method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-exec-method) | | 161 | [How do you change the style of a HTML element](#how-do-you-change-the-style-of-a-html-element) | | 162 | [What would be the result of 1+2+'3'](#what-would-be-the-result-of-123) | | 163 | [What is a debugger statement](#what-is-a-debugger-statement) | | 164 | [What is the purpose of breakpoints in debugging](#what-is-the-purpose-of-breakpoints-in-debugging) | | 165 | [Can I use reserved words as identifiers](#can-i-use-reserved-words-as-identifiers) | | 166 | [How do you detect a mobile browser](#how-do-you-detect-a-mobile-browser) | | 167 | [How do you detect a mobile browser without regexp](#how-do-you-detect-a-mobile-browser-without-regexp) | | 168 | [How do you get the image width and height using JS](#how-do-you-get-the-image-width-and-height-using-js) | | 169 | [How do you make synchronous HTTP request](#how-do-you-make-synchronous-http-request) | | 170 | [How do you make asynchronous HTTP request](#how-do-you-make-asynchronous-http-request) | | 171 | [How do you convert date to another timezone in javascript](#how-do-you-convert-date-to-another-timezone-in-javascript) | | 172 | [What are the properties used to get size of window](#what-are-the-properties-used-to-get-size-of-window) | | 173 | [What is a conditional operator in javascript](#what-is-a-conditional-operator-in-javascript) | | 174 | [Can you apply chaining on conditional operator](#can-you-apply-chaining-on-conditional-operator) | | 175 | [What are the ways to execute javascript after page load](#what-are-the-ways-to-execute-javascript-after-page-load) | | 176 | [What is the difference between proto and prototype](#what-is-the-difference-between-proto-and-prototype) | | 177 | [Can you give an example of when you really need a semicolon](#can-you-give-an-example-of-when-you-really-need-a-semicolon) | | 178 | [What is a freeze method](#what-is-a-freeze-method) | | 179 | [What is the purpose of freeze method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-freeze-method) | | 180 | [Why do I need to use freeze method](#why-do-i-need-to-use-freeze-method) | | 181 | [How do you detect a browser language preference](#how-do-you-detect-a-browser-language-preference) | | 182 | [How to convert string to title case with javascript](#how-to-convert-string-to-title-case-with-javascript) | | 183 | [How do you detect javascript disabled in the page](#how-do-you-detect-javascript-disabled-in-the-page) | | 184 | [What are various operators supported by javascript](#what-are-various-operators-supported-by-javascript) | | 185 | [What is a rest parameter](#what-is-a-rest-parameter) | | 186 | [What happens if you do not use rest parameter as a last argument](#what-happens-if-you-do-not-use-rest-parameter-as-a-last-argument) | | 187 | [What are the bitwise operators available in javascript](#what-are-the-bitwise-operators-available-in-javascript) | | 188 | [What is a spread operator](#what-is-a-spread-operator) | | 189 | [How do you determine whether object is frozen or not](#how-do-you-determine-whether-object-is-frozen-or-not) | | 190 | [How do you determine two values same or not using object](#how-do-you-determine-two-values-same-or-not-using-object) | | 191 | [What is the purpose of using object is method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-using-object-is-method) | | 192 | [How do you copy properties from one object to other](#how-do-you-copy-properties-from-one-object-to-other) | | 193 | [What are the applications of assign method](#what-are-the-applications-of-assign-method) | | 194 | [What is a proxy object](#what-is-a-proxy-object) | | 195 | [What is the purpose of seal method](#what-is-the-purpose-of-seal-method) | | 196 | [What are the applications of seal method](#what-are-the-applications-of-seal-method) | | 197 | [What are the differences between freeze and seal methods](#what-are-the-differences-between-freeze-and-seal-methods) | | 198 | [How do you determine if an object is sealed or not](#how-do-you-determine-if-an-object-is-sealed-or-not) | | 199 | [How do you get enumerable key and value pairs](#how-do-you-get-enumerable-key-and-value-pairs) | | 200 | [What is the main difference between Object.values and Object.entries method](#what-is-the-main-difference-between-objectvalues-and-objectentries-method) | | 201 | [How can you get the list of keys of any object](#how-can-you-get-the-list-of-keys-of-any-object) | | 202 | [How do you create an object with prototype](#how-do-you-create-an-object-with-prototype) | | 203 | [What is a WeakSet](#what-is-a-weakset) | | 204 | [What are the differences between WeakSet and Set](#what-are-the-differences-between-weakset-and-set) | | 205 | [List down the collection of methods available on WeakSet](#list-down-the-collection-of-methods-available-on-weakset) | | 206 | [What is a WeakMap](#what-is-a-weakmap) | | 207 | [What are the differences between WeakMap and Map](#what-are-the-differences-between-weakmap-and-map) | | 208 | [List down the collection of methods available on WeakMap](#list-down-the-collection-of-methods-available-on-weakmap) | | 209 | [What is the purpose of uneval](#what-is-the-purpose-of-uneval) | | 210 | [How do you encode an URL](#how-do-you-encode-an-url) | | 211 | [How do you decode an URL](#how-do-you-decode-an-url) | | 212 | [How do you print the contents of web page](#how-do-you-print-the-contents-of-web-page) | | 213 | [What is the difference between uneval and eval](#what-is-the-difference-between-uneval-and-eval) | | 214 | [What is an anonymous function](#what-is-an-anonymous-function) | | 215 | [What is the precedence order between local and global variables](#what-is-the-precedence-order-between-local-and-global-variables) | | 216 | [What are javascript accessors](#what-are-javascript-accessors) | | 217 | [How do you define property on Object constructor](#how-do-you-define-property-on-object-constructor) | | 218 | [What is the difference between get and defineProperty](#what-is-the-difference-between-get-and-defineproperty) | | 219 | [What are the advantages of Getters and Setters](#what-are-the-advantages-of-getters-and-setters) | | 220 | [Can I add getters and setters using defineProperty method](#can-i-add-getters-and-setters-using-defineproperty-method) | | 221 | [What is the purpose of switch-case](#what-is-the-purpose-of-switch-case) | | 222 | [What are the conventions to be followed for the usage of switch case](#what-are-the-conventions-to-be-followed-for-the-usage-of-switch-case) | | 223 | [What are primitive data types](#what-are-primitive-data-types) | | 224 | [What are the different ways to access object properties](#what-are-the-different-ways-to-access-object-properties) | | 225 | [What are the function parameter rules](#what-are-the-function-parameter-rules) | | 226 | [What is an error object](#what-is-an-error-object) | | 227 | [When you get a syntax error](#when-you-get-a-syntax-error) | | 228 | [What are the different error names from error object](#what-are-the-different-error-names-from-error-object) | | 229 | [What are the various statements in error handling](#what-are-the-various-statements-in-error-handling) | | 230 | [What are the two types of loops in javascript](#what-are-the-two-types-of-loops-in-javascript) | | 231 | [What is nodejs](#what-is-nodejs) | | 232 | [What is an Intl object](#what-is-an-intl-object) | | 233 | [How do you perform language specific date and time formatting](#how-do-you-perform-language-specific-date-and-time-formatting) | | 234 | [What is an Iterator](#what-is-an-iterator) | | 235 | [How does synchronous iteration works](#how-does-synchronous-iteration-works) | | 236 | [What is an event loop](#what-is-an-event-loop) | | 237 | [What is call stack](#what-is-call-stack) | | 238 | [What is an event queue](#what-is-an-event-queue) | | 239 | [What is a decorator](#what-is-a-decorator) | | 240 | [What are the properties of Intl object](#what-are-the-properties-of-intl-object) | | 241 | [What is an Unary operator](#what-is-an-unary-operator) | | 242 | [How do you sort elements in an array](#how-do-you-sort-elements-in-an-array) | | 243 | [What is the purpose of compareFunction while sorting arrays](#what-is-the-purpose-of-comparefunction-while-sorting-arrays) | | 244 | [How do you reversing an array](#how-do-you-reversing-an-array) | | 245 | [How do you find min and max value in an array](#how-do-you-find-min-and-max-value-in-an-array) | | 246 | [How do you find min and max values without Math functions](#how-do-you-find-min-and-max-values-without-math-functions) | | 247 | [What is an empty statement and purpose of it](#what-is-an-empty-statement-and-purpose-of-it) | | 248 | [How do you get metadata of a module](#how-do-you-get-metadata-of-a-module) | | 249 | [What is a comma operator](#what-is-a-comma-operator) | | 250 | [What is the advantage of a comma operator](#what-is-the-advantage-of-a-comma-operator) | | 251 | [What is typescript](#what-is-typescript) | | 252 | [What are the differences between javascript and typescript](#what-are-the-differences-between-javascript-and-typescript) | | 253 | [What are the advantages of typescript over javascript](#what-are-the-advantages-of-typescript-over-javascript) | | 254 | [What is an object initializer](#what-is-an-object-initializer) | | 255 | [What is a constructor method](#what-is-a-constructor-method) | | 256 | [What happens if you write constructor more than once in a class](#what-happens-if-you-write-constructor-more-than-once-in-a-class) | | 257 | [How do you call the constructor of a parent class](#how-do-you-call-the-constructor-of-a-parent-class) | | 258 | [How do you get the prototype of an object](#how-do-you-get-the-prototype-of-an-object) | | 259 | [What happens If I pass string type for getPrototype method](#what-happens-if-i-pass-string-type-for-getprototype-method) | | 260 | [How do you set prototype of one object to another](#how-do-you-set-prototype-of-one-object-to-another) | | 261 | [How do you check whether an object can be extendable or not](#how-do-you-check-whether-an-object-can-be-extendable-or-not) | | 262 | [How do you prevent an object to extend](#how-do-you-prevent-an-object-to-extend) | | 263 | [What are the different ways to make an object non-extensible](#what-are-the-different-ways-to-make-an-object-non-extensible) | | 264 | [How do you define multiple properties on an object](#how-do-you-define-multiple-properties-on-an-object) | | 265 | [What is MEAN in javascript](#what-is-mean-in-javascript) | | 266 | [What Is Obfuscation in javascript](#what-is-obfuscation-in-javascript) | | 267 | [Why do you need Obfuscation](#why-do-you-need-obfuscation) | | 268 | [What is Minification](#what-is-minification) | | 269 | [What are the advantages of minification](#what-are-the-advantages-of-minification) | | 270 | [What are the differences between Obfuscation and Encryption](#what-are-the-differences-between-obfuscation-and-encryption) | | 271 | [What are the common tools used for minification](#what-are-the-common-tools-used-for-minification) | | 272 | [How do you perform form validation using javascript](#how-do-you-perform-form-validation-using-javascript) | | 273 | [How do you perform form validation without javascript](#how-do-you-perform-form-validation-without-javascript) | | 274 | [What are the DOM methods available for constraint validation](#what-are-the-dom-methods-available-for-constraint-validation) | | 275 | [What are the available constraint validation DOM properties](#what-are-the-available-constraint-validation-dom-properties) | | 276 | [What are the list of validity properties](#what-are-the-list-of-validity-properties) | | 277 | [Give an example usage of rangeOverflow property](#give-an-example-usage-of-rangeoverflow-property) | | 278 | [Is enums feature available in javascript](#is-enums-feature-available-in-javascript) | | 279 | [What is an enum](#what-is-an-enum) | | 280 | [How do you list all properties of an object](#how-do-you-list-all-properties-of-an-object) | | 281 | [How do you get property descriptors of an object](#how-do-you-get-property-descriptors-of-an-object) | | 282 | [What are the attributes provided by a property descriptor](#what-are-the-attributes-provided-by-a-property-descriptor) | | 283 | [How do you extend classes](#how-do-you-extend-classes) | | 284 | [How do I modify the url without reloading the page](#how-do-i-modify-the-url-without-reloading-the-page) | | 285 | [How do you check whether an array includes a particular value or not](#how-do-you-check-whether-an-array-includes-a-particular-value-or-not) | | 286 | [How do you compare scalar arrays](#how-do-you-compare-scalar-arrays) | | 287 | [How to get the value from get parameters](#how-to-get-the-value-from-get-parameters) | | 288 | [How do you print numbers with commas as thousand separators](#how-do-you-print-numbers-with-commas-as-thousand-separators) | | 289 | [What is the difference between java and javascript](#what-is-the-difference-between-java-and-javascript) | | 290 | [Does JavaScript supports namespace](#does-javascript-supports-namespace) | | 291 | [How do you declare namespace](#how-do-you-declare-namespace) | | 292 | [How do you invoke javascript code in an iframe from parent page](#how-do-you-invoke-javascript-code-in-an-iframe-from-parent-page) | | 293 | [How do get the timezone offset from date](#how-do-get-the-timezone-offset-from-date) | | 294 | [How do you load CSS and JS files dynamically](#how-do-you-load-css-and-js-files-dynamically) | | 295 | [What are the different methods to find HTML elements in DOM](#what-are-the-different-methods-to-find-html-elements-in-dom) | | 296 | [What is jQuery](#what-is-jquery) | | 297 | [What is V8 JavaScript engine](#what-is-v8-javascript-engine) | | 298 | [Why do we call javascript as dynamic language](#why-do-we-call-javascript-as-dynamic-language) | | 299 | [What is a void operator](#what-is-a-void-operator) | | 300 | [How to set the cursor to wait](#how-to-set-the-cursor-to-wait) | | 301 | [How do you create an infinite loop](#how-do-you-create-an-infinite-loop) | | 302 | [Why do you need to avoid with statement](#why-do-you-need-to-avoid-with-statement) | | 303 | [What is the output of the following for loops](#what-is-the-output-of-the-following-for-loops) | | 304 | [List down some of the features of ES6](#list-down-some-of-the-features-of-es6) | | 305 | [What is ES6](#what-is-es6) | | 306 | [Can I redeclare let and const variables](#can-i-redeclare-let-and-const-variables) | | 307 | [Does the `const` variable make the value immutable](#does-the-const-variable-make-the-value-immutable) | | 308 | [What are default parameters](#what-are-default-parameters) | | 309 | [What are template literals](#what-are-template-literals) | | 310 | [How do you write multi-line strings in template literals](#how-do-you-write-multi-line-strings-in-template-literals) | | 311 | [What are nesting templates](#what-are-nesting-templates) | | 312 | [What are tagged templates](#what-are-tagged-templates) | | 313 | [What are raw strings](#what-are-raw-strings) | | 314 | [What is destructuring assignment](#what-is-destructuring-assignment) | | 315 | [What are default values in destructuring assignment](#what-are-default-values-in-destructuring-assignment) | | 316 | [How do you swap variables in destructuring assignment](#how-do-you-swap-variables-in-destructuring-assignment) | | 317 | [What are enhanced object literals](#what-are-enhanced-object-literals) | | 318 | [What are dynamic imports](#what-are-dynamic-imports) | | 319 | [What are the use cases for dynamic imports](#what-are-the-use-cases-for-dynamic-imports) | | 320 | [What are typed arrays](#what-are-typed-arrays) | | 321 | [What are the advantages of module loaders](#what-are-the-advantages-of-module-loaders) | | 322 | [What is collation](#what-is-collation) | | 323 | [What is for...of statement](#what-is-forof-statement) | | 324 | [What is the output of below spread operator array](#what-is-the-output-of-below-spread-operator-array) | | 325 | [Is PostMessage secure](#is-postmessage-secure) | | 326 | [What are the problems with postmessage target origin as wildcard](#what-are-the-problems-with-postmessage-target-origin-as-wildcard) | | 327 | [How do you avoid receiving postMessages from attackers](#how-do-you-avoid-receiving-postmessages-from-attackers) | | 328 | [Can I avoid using postMessages completely](#can-i-avoid-using-postmessages-completely) | | 329 | [Is postMessages synchronous](#is-postmessages-synchronous) | | 330 | [What paradigm is Javascript](#what-paradigm-is-javascript) | | 331 | [What is the difference between internal and external javascript](#what-is-the-difference-between-internal-and-external-javascript) | | 332 | [Is JavaScript faster than server side script](#is-javascript-faster-than-server-side-script) | | 333 | [How do you get the status of a checkbox](#how-do-you-get-the-status-of-a-checkbox) | | 334 | [What is the purpose of double tilde operator](#what-is-the-purpose-of-double-tilde-operator) | | 335 | [How do you convert character to ASCII code](#how-do-you-convert-character-to-ascii-code) | | 336 | [What is ArrayBuffer](#what-is-arraybuffer) | | 337 | [What is the output of below string expression](#what-is-the-output-of-below-string-expression) | | 338 | [What is the purpose of Error object](#what-is-the-purpose-of-error-object) | | 339 | [What is the purpose of EvalError object](#what-is-the-purpose-of-evalerror-object) | | 340 | [What are the list of cases error thrown from non-strict mode to strict mode](#what-are-the-list-of-cases-error-thrown-from-non-strict-mode-to-strict-mode) | | 341 | [Do all objects have prototypes](#do-all-objects-have-prototypes) | | 342 | [What is the difference between a parameter and an argument](#what-is-the-difference-between-a-parameter-and-an-argument) | | 343 | [What is the purpose of some method in arrays](#what-is-the-purpose-of-some-method-in-arrays) | | 344 | [How do you combine two or more arrays](#how-do-you-combine-two-or-more-arrays) | | 345 | [What is the difference between Shallow and Deep copy](#what-is-the-difference-between-shallow-and-deep-copy) | | 346 | [How do you create specific number of copies of a string](#how-do-you-create-specific-number-of-copies-of-a-string) | | 347 | [How do you return all matching strings against a regular expression](#how-do-you-return-all-matching-strings-against-a-regular-expression) | | 348 | [How do you trim a string at the beginning or ending](#how-do-you-trim-a-string-at-the-beginning-or-ending) | | 349 | [What is the output of below console statement with unary operator](#what-is-the-output-of-below-console-statement-with-unary-operator) | | 350 | [Does javascript uses mixins](#does-javascript-uses-mixins) | | 351 | [What is a thunk function](#what-is-a-thunk-function) | | 352 | [What are asynchronous thunks](#what-are-asynchronous-thunks) | | 353 | [What is the output of below function calls](#what-is-the-output-of-below-function-calls) | | 354 | [How to remove all line breaks from a string](#how-to-remove-all-line-breaks-from-a-string) | | 355 | [What is the difference between reflow and repaint](#what-is-the-difference-between-reflow-and-repaint) | | 356 | [What happens with negating an array](#what-happens-with-negating-an-array) | | 357 | [What happens if we add two arrays](#what-happens-if-we-add-two-arrays) | | 358 | [What is the output of prepend additive operator on falsy values](#what-is-the-output-of-prepend-additive-operator-on-falsy-values) | | 359 | [How do you create self string using special characters](#how-do-you-create-self-string-using-special-characters) | | 360 | [How do you remove falsy values from an array](#how-do-you-remove-falsy-values-from-an-array) | | 361 | [How do you get unique values of an array](#how-do-you-get-unique-values-of-an-array) | | 362 | [What is destructuring aliases](#what-is-destructuring-aliases) | | 363 | [How do you map the array values without using map method](#how-do-you-map-the-array-values-without-using-map-method) | | 364 | [How do you empty an array](#how-do-you-empty-an-array) | | 365 | [How do you round numbers to certain decimals](#how-do-you-round-numbers-to-certain-decimals) | | 366 | [What is the easiest way to convert an array to an object](#what-is-the-easiest-way-to-convert-an-array-to-an-object) | | 367 | [How do you create an array with some data](#how-do-you-create-an-array-with-some-data) | | 368 | [What are the placeholders from console object](#what-are-the-placeholders-from-console-object) | | 369 | [Is it possible to add CSS to console messages](#is-it-possible-to-add-css-to-console-messages) | | 370 | [What is the purpose of dir method of console object](#what-is-the-purpose-of-dir-method-of-console-object) | | 371 | [Is it possible to debug HTML elements in console](#is-it-possible-to-debug-html-elements-in-console) | | 372 | [How do you display data in a tabular format using console object](#how-do-you-display-data-in-a-tabular-format-using-console-object) | | 373 | [How do you verify that an argument is a Number or not](#how-do-you-verify-that-an-argument-is-a-number-or-not) | | 374 | [How do you create copy to clipboard button](#how-do-you-create-copy-to-clipboard-button) | | 375 | [What is the shortcut to get timestamp](#what-is-the-shortcut-to-get-timestamp) | | 376 | [How do you flattening multi dimensional arrays](#how-do-you-flattening-multi-dimensional-arrays) | | 377 | [What is the easiest multi condition checking](#what-is-the-easiest-multi-condition-checking) | | 378 | [How do you capture browser back button](#how-do-you-capture-browser-back-button) | | 379 | [How do you disable right click in the web page](#how-do-you-disable-right-click-in-the-web-page) | | 380 | [What are wrapper objects](#what-are-wrapper-objects) | | 381 | [What is AJAX](#what-is-ajax) | | 382 | [What are the different ways to deal with Asynchronous Code](#what-are-the-different-ways-to-deal-with-asynchronous-code) | | 383 | [How to cancel a fetch request](#how-to-cancel-a-fetch-request) | | 384 | [What is web speech API](#what-is-web-speech-api) | | 385 | [What is minimum timeout throttling](#what-is-minimum-timeout-throttling) | | 386 | [How do you implement zero timeout in modern browsers](#how-do-you-implement-zero-timeout-in-modern-browsers) | | 387 | [What are tasks in event loop](#what-are-tasks-in-event-loop) | | 388 | [What is microtask](#what-is-microtask) | | 389 | [What are different event loops](#what-are-different-event-loops) | | 390 | [What is the purpose of queueMicrotask](#what-is-the-purpose-of-queuemicrotask) | | 391 | [How do you use javascript libraries in typescript file](#how-do-you-use-javascript-libraries-in-typescript-file) | | 392 | [What are the differences between promises and observables](#what-are-the-differences-between-promises-and-observables) | | 393 | [What is heap](#what-is-heap) | | 394 | [What is an event table](#what-is-an-event-table) | | 395 | [What is a microTask queue](#what-is-a-microtask-queue) | | 396 | [What is the difference between shim and polyfill](#what-is-the-difference-between-shim-and-polyfill) | | 397 | [How do you detect primitive or non primitive value type](#how-do-you-detect-primitive-or-non-primitive-value-type) | | 398 | [What is babel](#what-is-babel) | | 399 | [Is Node.js completely single threaded](#is-nodejs-completely-single-threaded) | | 400 | [What are the common use cases of observables](#what-are-the-common-use-cases-of-observables) | | 401 | [What is RxJS](#what-is-rxjs) | | 402 | [What is the difference between Function constructor and function declaration](#what-is-the-difference-between-function-constructor-and-function-declaration) | | 403 | [What is a Short circuit condition](#what-is-a-short-circuit-condition) | | 404 | [What is the easiest way to resize an array](#what-is-the-easiest-way-to-resize-an-array) | | 405 | [What is an observable](#what-is-an-observable) | | 406 | [What is the difference between function and class declarations](#what-is-the-difference-between-function-and-class-declarations) | | 407 | [What is an async function](#what-is-an-async-function) | | 408 | [How do you prevent promises swallowing errors](#how-do-you-prevent-promises-swallowing-errors) | | 409 | [What is deno](#what-is-deno) | | 410 | [How do you make an object iterable in javascript](#how-do-you-make-an-object-iterable-in-javascript) | | 411 | [What is a Proper Tail Call](#what-is-a-proper-tail-call) | | 412 | [How do you check an object is a promise or not](#how-do-you-check-an-object-is-a-promise-or-not) | | 413 | [How to detect if a function is called as constructor](#how-to-detect-if-a-function-is-called-as-constructor) | | 414 | [What are the differences between arguments object and rest parameter](#what-are-the-differences-between-arguments-object-and-rest-parameter) | | 415 | [What are the differences between spread operator and rest parameter](#what-are-the-differences-between-spread-operator-and-rest-parameter) | | 416 | [What are the different kinds of generators](#what-are-the-different-kinds-of-generators) | | 417 | [What are the built-in iterables](#what-are-the-built-in-iterables) | | 418 | [What are the differences between for...of and for...in statements](#what-are-the-differences-between-forof-and-forin-statements) | | 419 | [How do you define instance and non-instance properties](#how-do-you-define-instance-and-non-instance-properties) | | 420 | [What is the difference between isNaN and Number.isNaN?](#what-is-the-difference-between-isnan-and-numberisnan) | | 421 | [How to invoke an IIFE without any extra brackets?](#how-to-invoke-an-iife-without-any-extra-brackets) | | 422 | [Is that possible to use expressions in switch cases?](#is-that-possible-to-use-expressions-in-switch-cases) | | 423 | [What is the easiest way to ignore promise errors?](#what-is-the-easiest-way-to-ignore-promise-errors) | | 424 | [How do style the console output using CSS?](#how-do-style-the-console-output-using-css) | | 425 | [What is nullish coalescing operator (??)?](#what-is-nullish-coalescing-operator-) | | 426 | [How do you group and nest console output?](#how-do-you-group-and-nest-console-output) | | 427 | [What is the difference between dense and sparse arrays?](#what-is-the-difference-between-dense-and-sparse-arrays) | | 428 | [What are the different ways to create sparse arrays?](#what-are-the-different-ways-to-create-sparse-arrays) | | 429 | [What is the difference between setTimeout, setImmediate and process.nextTick?](#what-is-the-difference-between-settimeout-setimmediate-and-processnexttick) | | 430 | [How do you reverse an array without modifying original array?](#how-do-you-reverse-an-array-without-modifying-original-array) | | 431 | [How do you create custom HTML element?](#how-do-you-create-custom-html-element) | | 432 | [What is global execution context?](#what-is-global-execution-context) | | 433 | [What is function execution context?](#what-is-function-execution-context) | | 434 | [What is debouncing?](#what-is-debouncing) | | 435 | [What is throttling?](#what-is-throttling) | | 436 | [What is optional chaining?](#what-is-optional-chaining) | | 437 | [What is an environment record?](#what-is-an-environment-record) | | 438 | [How to verify if a variable is an array?](#how-to-verify-if-a-variable-is-an-array) | | 439 | [What is pass by value and pass by reference?](#what-is-pass-by-value-and-pass-by-reference) | | 440 | [What are the differences between primitives and non-primitives?](#what-are-the-differences-between-primitives-and-non-primitives) | | 441 | [How do you create your own bind method using either call or apply method?](#how-do-you-create-your-own-bind-method-using-either-call-or-apply-method) | | 442 | [What are the differences between pure and impure functions?](#what-are-the-differences-between-pure-and-impure-functions) | | 443 | [What is referential transparency?](#what-is-referential-transparency) | | 444 | [What are the possible side-effects in javascript?](#what-are-the-possible-side-effects-in-javascript) | | 445 | [What are compose and pipe functions?](#what-are-compose-and-pipe-functions) | | 446 | [What is module pattern?](#what-is-module-pattern) | | 447 | [What is Function Composition?](#what-is-function-composition) | | 448 | [How to use await outside of async function prior to ES2022?](#how-to-use-await-outside-of-async-function-prior-to-es2022) | | 449 | [What is the purpose of the this keyword in JavaScript?](#what-is-the-purpose-of-the-this-keyword-in-javascript) | | 450 | [What are the uses of closures?](#what-are-the-uses-of-closures) | | 451 | [What are the phases of execution context?](#what-are-the-phases-of-execution-context) | | 452 | [What are the possible reasons for memory leaks?](#what-are-the-possible-reasons-for-memory-leaks) | | 453 | [What are the optimization techniques of V8 engine?](#what-are-the-optimization-techniques-of-v8-engine) | | 454 | [What are the examples of built-in higher order functions?](#what-are-the-examples-of-built-in-higher-order-functions) | | 455 | [What are the benefits higher order functions?](#what-are-the-benefits-higher-order-functions) | | 456 | [How do you create polyfills for map, filter and reduce methods?](#how-do-you-create-polyfills-for-map-filter-and-reduce-methods) | | 457 | [What is the difference between map and forEach functions?](#what-is-the-difference-between-map-and-foreach-functions) | | 458 | [Give an example of statements affected by automatic semicolon insertion?](#give-an-example-of-statements-affected-by-automatic-semicolon-insertion) | | 459 | [What are the event phases of a browser?](#what-are-the-event-phases-of-a-browser) | | 460 | [What are the real world use cases of proxy?](#what-are-the-real-world-use-cases-of-proxy) | | 461 | [What are hidden classes?](#what-are-hidden-classes) | | 462 | [What is inline caching?](#what-is-inline-caching) | | 463 | [What are the different ways to execute external scripts?](#what-are-the-different-ways-to-execute-external-scripts) | | 464 | [What is Lexical Scope?](#what-is-lexical-scope) | | 465 | [How to detect system dark mode in javascript?](#how-to-detect-system-dark-mode-in-javascript) | | 466 | [What is the purpose of requestAnimationFrame method?](#what-is-the-purpose-of-requestanimationframe-method) | | 467 | [What is the difference between substring and substr methods?](#what-is-the-difference-between-substring-and-substr-methods) | | 468 | [How to find the number of parameters expected by a function?](#how-to-find-the-number-of-parameters-expected-by-a-function) | | 469 | [What is globalThis, and what is the importance of it?](#what-is-globalthis-and-what-is-the-importance-of-it) | | 470 | [What are the array mutation methods?](#what-are-the-array-mutation-methods) |
  1. What are the possible ways to create objects in JavaScript

    There are many ways to create objects in javascript as mentioned below:

    1. Object literal syntax:

      The object literal syntax (or object initializer), is a comma-separated set of name-value pairs wrapped in curly braces.

      var object = {
           name: "Sudheer",
           age: 34
      };
      

      Object literal property values can be of any data type, including array, function, and nested object.

      Note: This is one of the easiest ways to create an object.

    2. Object constructor:

      The simplest way to create an empty object is using the Object constructor. Currently this approach is not recommended.

      var object = new Object();
      

      The Object() is a built-in constructor function so “new” keyword is not required. The above code snippet can be re-written as:

      var object = Object();
      
    3. Object’s create method:

      The create method of Object is used to create a new object by passing the specified prototype object and properties as arguments, i.e., this pattern is helpful to create new objects based on existing objects. The second argument is optional and it is used to create properties on a newly created object.

      The following code creates a new empty object whose prototype is null.

      var object = Object.create(null);
      

      The following example creates an object along with additional new properties.

      let vehicle = {
       wheels: '4',
       fuelType: 'Gasoline',
       color: 'Green'
      }
      let carProps = {
       type: {
         value: 'Volkswagen'
       },
       model: {
         value: 'Golf'
       }
      }
      
      var car = Object.create(vehicle, carProps);
      console.log(car);
      
    4. Function constructor:

      In this approach, create any function and apply the new operator to create object instances.

      function Person(name) {
       this.name = name;
       this.age = 21;
      }
      var object = new Person("Sudheer");
      
    5. Function constructor with prototype:

      This is similar to function constructor but it uses prototype for their properties and methods,

      function Person() {}
      Person.prototype.name = "Sudheer";
      var object = new Person();
      

      This is equivalent to creating an instance with Object.create method with a function prototype and then calling that function with an instance and parameters as arguments.

      function func() {}
      
      new func(x, y, z);
      

      (OR)

      // Create a new instance using function prototype.
      var newInstance = Object.create(func.prototype)
      
      // Call the function
      var result = func.call(newInstance, x, y, z),
      
      // If the result is a non-null object then use it otherwise just use the new instance.
      console.log(result && typeof result === 'object' ? result : newInstance);
      
    6. Object’s assign method:

      The Object.assign method is used to copy all the properties from one or more source objects and stores them into a target object.

      The following code creates a new staff object by copying properties of his working company and the car he owns.

      const orgObject = { company: 'XYZ Corp'};
      const carObject = { name: 'Toyota'};
      const staff = Object.assign({}, orgObject, carObject);
      
    7. ES6 Class syntax:

      ES6 introduces class feature to create objects.

      class Person {
       constructor(name) {
         this.name = name;
       }
      }
      
      var object = new Person("Sudheer");
      
    8. Singleton pattern:

      A Singleton is an object which can only be instantiated one time. Repeated calls to its constructor return the same instance. This way one can ensure that they don’t accidentally create multiple instances.

      var object = new (function () {
       this.name = "Sudheer";
      })();
      

      ⬆ Back to Top

  2. What is a prototype chain

    Prototype chaining is used to build new types of objects based on existing ones. It is similar to inheritance in a class based language. i.e, When you create an object using a constructor function or a class, the created object inherits properties from a prototype object.

    The prototype on object instance is available through Object.getPrototypeOf(object) or __proto__ property whereas prototype on constructor function is available through Object.prototype.

    Screenshot

    ⬆ Back to Top

  3. What is the difference between Call, Apply and Bind

    The difference between Call, Apply and Bind can be explained with below examples,

    Call: The call() method invokes a function with a given this value and arguments provided one by one

    var employee1 = { firstName: "John", lastName: "Rodson" };
    var employee2 = { firstName: "Jimmy", lastName: "Baily" };
    
    function invite(greeting1, greeting2) {
     console.log(
       greeting1 + " " + this.firstName + " " + this.lastName + ", " + greeting2
     );
    }
    
    invite.call(employee1, "Hello", "How are you?"); // Hello John Rodson, How are you?
    invite.call(employee2, "Hello", "How are you?"); // Hello Jimmy Baily, How are you?
    

    Apply: Invokes the function with a given this value and allows you to pass in arguments as an array

    var employee1 = { firstName: "John", lastName: "Rodson" };
    var employee2 = { firstName: "Jimmy", lastName: "Baily" };
    
    function invite(greeting1, greeting2) {
     console.log(
       greeting1 + " " + this.firstName + " " + this.lastName + ", " + greeting2
     );
    }
    
    invite.apply(employee1, ["Hello", "How are you?"]); // Hello John Rodson, How are you?
    invite.apply(employee2, ["Hello", "How are you?"]); // Hello Jimmy Baily, How are you?
    

    Bind: returns a new function, allowing you to pass any number of arguments

    var employee1 = { firstName: "John", lastName: "Rodson" };
    var employee2 = { firstName: "Jimmy", lastName: "Baily" };
    
    function invite(greeting1, greeting2) {
     console.log(
       greeting1 + " " + this.firstName + " " + this.lastName + ", " + greeting2
     );
    }
    
    var inviteEmployee1 = invite.bind(employee1);
    var inviteEmployee2 = invite.bind(employee2);
    inviteEmployee1("Hello", "How are you?"); // Hello John Rodson, How are you?
    inviteEmployee2("Hello", "How are you?"); // Hello Jimmy Baily, How are you?
    

    Call and Apply are pretty much interchangeable. Both execute the current function immediately. You need to decide whether it’s easier to send in an array or a comma separated list of arguments. You can remember by treating Call is for comma (separated list) and Apply is for Array.

    Bind creates a new function that will have this set to the first parameter passed to bind().

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  4. What is JSON and its common operations

    JSON is a text-based data format following JavaScript object syntax, which was popularized by Douglas Crockford. It is useful when you want to transmit data across a network. It is basically just a text file with an extension of .json, and a MIME type of application/json

    Parsing: Converting a string to a native object

    JSON.parse(text);
    

    Stringification: Converting a native object to a string so that it can be transmitted across the network

    JSON.stringify(object);
    

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  5. What is the purpose of the array slice method

    The slice() method returns the selected elements in an array as a new array object. It selects the elements starting at the given start argument, and ends at the given optional end argument without including the last element. If you omit the second argument then it selects till the end of the array. This method can also accept negative index which counts back from the end of the array.

    Some of the examples of this method are,

    let arrayIntegers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    let arrayIntegers1 = arrayIntegers.slice(0, 2); // returns [1,2]
    let arrayIntegers2 = arrayIntegers.slice(2, 3); // returns [3]
    let arrayIntegers3 = arrayIntegers.slice(4); //returns [5]
    let arrayIntegers4 = arrayIntegers.slice(-3, -1); //returns [3, 4]
    

    Note: Slice method doesn’t mutate the original array but it returns the subset as a new array.

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  6. What is the purpose of the array splice method

    The splice() method adds/removes items to/from an array, and then returns the removed item. The first argument specifies the array position/index for insertion or deletion whereas the optional second argument indicates the number of elements to be deleted. Each additional argument is added to the array.

    Some of the examples of this method are:

    let arrayIntegersOriginal1 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    let arrayIntegersOriginal2 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    let arrayIntegersOriginal3 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    
    let arrayIntegers1 = arrayIntegersOriginal1.splice(0, 2); // returns [1, 2]; original array: [3, 4, 5]
    let arrayIntegers2 = arrayIntegersOriginal2.splice(3); // returns [4, 5]; original array: [1, 2, 3]
    let arrayIntegers3 = arrayIntegersOriginal3.splice(3, 1, "a", "b", "c"); //returns [4]; original array: [1, 2, 3, "a", "b", "c", 5]
    

    Note: Splice method modifies the original array and returns the deleted array.

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  7. What is the difference between slice and splice

    Some of the major differences in a tabular form:

    Slice Splice
    Doesn’t modify the original array(immutable) Modifies the original array(mutable)
    Returns the subset of original array Returns the deleted elements as array
    Used to pick the elements from array Used to insert/delete elements to/from array

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  8. How do you compare Object and Map

    Objects are similar to Maps in that both let you set keys to values, retrieve those values, delete keys, and detect whether something is stored at a key. Due to this reason, Objects have been used as Maps historically. But there are important differences that make using a Map preferable in certain cases:

    1. The keys of an Object can be Strings and Symbols, whereas they can be any value for a Map, including functions, objects, and any primitive type.
    2. The keys in a Map are ordered while keys added to Object are not. Thus, when iterating over it, a Map object returns keys in the order of insertion.
    3. You can get the size of a Map easily with the size property, while the number of properties in an Object must be determined manually.
    4. A Map is an iterable and can thus be directly iterated, whereas iterating over an Object requires obtaining its keys in some fashion and iterating over them.
    5. An Object has a prototype, so there are default keys in an object that could collide with your keys if you’re not careful. As of ES5 this can be bypassed by creating an object(which can be called a map) using Object.create(null), but this practice is seldom done.
    6. A Map may perform better in scenarios involving frequent addition and removal of key pairs.

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  9. What is the difference between == and === operators

    JavaScript provides both strict(===, !==) and type-converting(==, !=) equality comparison. The strict operators take type of variable in consideration, while non-strict operators make type correction/conversion based upon values of variables. The strict operators follow the below conditions for different types,

    1. Two strings are strictly equal when they have the same sequence of characters, same length, and same characters in corresponding positions.
    2. Two numbers are strictly equal when they are numerically equal, i.e., having the same number value. There are two special cases in this,
      1. NaN is not equal to anything, including NaN.
      2. Positive and negative zeros are equal to one another.
    3. Two Boolean operands are strictly equal if both are true or both are false.
    4. Two objects are strictly equal if they refer to the same Object.
    5. Null and Undefined types are not equal with ===, but equal with == . i.e, null===undefined --> false, but null==undefined --> true

    Some of the example which covers the above cases:

    0 == false   // true
    0 === false  // false
    1 == "1"     // true
    1 === "1"    // false
    null == undefined // true
    null === undefined // false
    '0' == false // true
    '0' === false // false
    NaN == NaN or NaN === NaN // false
    []==[] or []===[] //false, refer different objects in memory
    {}=={} or {}==={} //false, refer different objects in memory
    

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  10. What are lambda expressions or arrow functions

    An arrow function is a shorter/concise syntax for a function expression and does not have its own this, arguments, super, or new.target. These functions are best suited for non-method functions, and they cannot be used as constructors.

    Some of the examples of arrow functions are listed as below,

    const arrowFunc1 = (a, b) => a + b; // Multiple parameters
    const arrowFunc2 = a => a * 10; // Single parameter
    const arrowFunc3 = () => {} // no parameters
    

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  11. What is a first class function

    In Javascript, functions are first class objects. First-class functions means when functions in that language are treated like any other variable.

    For example, in such a language, a function can be passed as an argument to other functions, can be returned by another function and can be assigned as a value to a variable. For example, in the below example, handler functions assigned to a listener

    const handler = () => console.log("This is a click handler function");
    document.addEventListener("click", handler);
    

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  12. What is a first order function

    A first-order function is a function that doesn’t accept another function as an argument and doesn’t return a function as its return value.

    const firstOrder = () => console.log("I am a first order function!");
    

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  13. What is a higher order function

    A higher-order function is a function that accepts another function as an argument or returns a function as a return value or both. The syntactic structure of higher order function will be as follows,

    const firstOrderFunc = () =>
      console.log("Hello, I am a First order function");
    const higherOrder = (ReturnFirstOrderFunc) => ReturnFirstOrderFunc();
    higherOrder(firstOrderFunc);
    

    You can also call the function which you are passing to higher order function as callback function.

    The higher order function is helpful to write the modular and reusable code.

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  14. What is a unary function

    A unary function (i.e. monadic) is a function that accepts exactly one argument. It stands for a single argument accepted by a function.

    Let us take an example of unary function,

    const unaryFunction = (a) => console.log(a + 10); // Add 10 to the given argument and display the value
    

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  15. What is the currying function

    Currying is the process of taking a function with multiple arguments and turning it into a sequence of functions each with only a single argument. Currying is named after a mathematician Haskell Curry. By applying currying, an n-ary function turns into a unary function.

    Let’s take an example of n-ary function and how it turns into a currying function,

    const multiArgFunction = (a, b, c) => a + b + c;
    console.log(multiArgFunction(1, 2, 3)); // 6
    
    const curryUnaryFunction = (a) => (b) => (c) => a + b + c;
    curryUnaryFunction(1); // returns a function: b => c =>  1 + b + c
    curryUnaryFunction(1)(2); // returns a function: c => 3 + c
    curryUnaryFunction(1)(2)(3); // returns the number 6
    

    Curried functions are great to improve code reusability and functional composition.

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  16. What is a pure function

    A Pure function is a function where the return value is only determined by its arguments without any side effects. i.e, If you call a function with the same arguments ‘n’ number of times and ‘n’ number of places in the application then it will always return the same value.

    Let’s take an example to see the difference between pure and impure functions,

    //Impure
    let numberArray = [];
    const impureAddNumber = (number) => numberArray.push(number);
    //Pure
    const pureAddNumber = (number) => (argNumberArray) =>
      argNumberArray.concat([number]);
    
    //Display the results
    console.log(impureAddNumber(6)); // returns 1
    console.log(numberArray); // returns [6]
    console.log(pureAddNumber(7)(numberArray)); // returns [6, 7]
    console.log(numberArray); // returns [6]
    

    As per the above code snippets, the Push function is impure itself by altering the array and returning a push number index independent of the parameter value, whereas Concat on the other hand takes the array and concatenates it with the other array producing a whole new array without side effects. Also, the return value is a concatenation of the previous array.

    Remember that Pure functions are important as they simplify unit testing without any side effects and no need for dependency injection. They also avoid tight coupling and make it harder to break your application by not having any side effects. These principles are coming together with the Immutability concept of ES6: giving preference to const over let usage.

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  17. What is the purpose of the let keyword

    The let statement declares a block scope local variable. Hence the variables defined with let keyword are limited in scope to the block, statement, or expression on which it is used. Whereas variables declared with the var keyword used to define a variable globally, or locally to an entire function regardless of block scope.

    Let’s take an example to demonstrate the usage,

    let counter = 30;
    if (counter === 30) {
      let counter = 31;
      console.log(counter); // 31
    }
    console.log(counter); // 30 (because the variable in if block won't exist here)
    

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  18. What is the difference between let and var

    You can list out the differences in a tabular format

    var let
    It has been available from the beginning of JavaScript Introduced as part of ES6
    It has function scope It has block scope
    Variable declaration will be hoisted, initialized as undefined Hoisted but not initialized
    It is possible to re-declare the variable in the same scope It is not possible to re-declare the variable

    Let’s take an example to see the difference,

    function userDetails(username) {
      if (username) {
        console.log(salary); // undefined due to hoisting
        console.log(age); // ReferenceError: Cannot access 'age' before initialization
        let age = 30;
        var salary = 10000;
      }
      console.log(salary); //10000 (accessible due to function scope)
      console.log(age); //error: age is not defined(due to block scope)
    }
    userDetails("John");
    

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  19. What is the reason to choose the name let as a keyword

    let is a mathematical statement that was adopted by early programming languages like Scheme and Basic. It has been borrowed from dozens of other languages that use let already as a traditional keyword as close to var as possible.

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  20. How do you redeclare variables in a switch block without an error

    If you try to redeclare variables in a switch block then it will cause errors because there is only one block. For example, the below code block throws a syntax error as below,

    let counter = 1;
    switch (x) {
      case 0:
        let name;
        break;
    
      case 1:
        let name; // SyntaxError for redeclaration.
        break;
    }
    

    To avoid this error, you can create a nested block inside a case clause and create a new block scoped lexical environment.

    let counter = 1;
    switch (x) {
      case 0: {
        let name;
        break;
      }
      case 1: {
        let name; // No SyntaxError for redeclaration.
        break;
      }
    }
    

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  21. What is the Temporal Dead Zone

    The Temporal Dead Zone(TDZ) is a specific period or area of a block where a variable is inaccessible until it has been initialized with a value. This behavior in JavaScript that occurs when declaring a variable with the let and const keywords, but not with var. In ECMAScript 6, accessing a let or const variable before its declaration (within its scope) causes a ReferenceError.

    Let’s see this behavior with an example,

    function somemethod() {
      console.log(counter1); // undefined
      console.log(counter2); // ReferenceError
      var counter1 = 1;
      let counter2 = 2;
    }
    

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  22. What is an IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression)

    IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression) is a JavaScript function that runs as soon as it is defined. The signature of it would be as below,

    (function () {
      // logic here
    })();
    

    The primary reason to use an IIFE is to obtain data privacy because any variables declared within the IIFE cannot be accessed by the outside world. i.e, If you try to access variables from the IIFE then it throws an error as below,

    (function () {
      var message = "IIFE";
      console.log(message);
    })();
    console.log(message); //Error: message is not defined
    

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  23. How do you decode or encode a URL in JavaScript?

    encodeURI() function is used to encode an URL. This function requires a URL string as a parameter and return that encoded string. decodeURI() function is used to decode an URL. This function requires an encoded URL string as parameter and return that decoded string.

    Note: If you want to encode characters such as / ? : @ & = + $ # then you need to use encodeURIComponent().

    let uri = "employeeDetails?name=john&occupation=manager";
    let encoded_uri = encodeURI(uri);
    let decoded_uri = decodeURI(encoded_uri);
    

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  24. What is memoization

    Memoization is a functional programming technique which attempts to increase a function’s performance by caching its previously computed results. Each time a memoized function is called, its parameters are used to index the cache. If the data is present, then it can be returned, without executing the entire function. Otherwise the function is executed and then the result is added to the cache. Let’s take an example of adding function with memoization,

    const memoizeAddition = () => {
      let cache = {};
      return (value) => {
        if (value in cache) {
          console.log("Fetching from cache");
          return cache[value]; // Here, cache.value cannot be used as property name starts with the number which is not a valid JavaScript  identifier. Hence, can only be accessed using the square bracket notation.
        } else {
          console.log("Calculating result");
          let result = value + 20;
          cache[value] = result;
          return result;
        }
      };
    };
    // returned function from memoizeAddition
    const addition = memoizeAddition();
    console.log(addition(20)); //output: 40 calculated
    console.log(addition(20)); //output: 40 cached
    

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  25. What is Hoisting

    Hoisting is a JavaScript mechanism where variables, function declarations and classes are moved to the top of their scope before code execution. Remember that JavaScript only hoists declarations, not initialisation. Let’s take a simple example of variable hoisting,

    console.log(message); //output : undefined
    var message = "The variable Has been hoisted";
    

    The above code looks like as below to the interpreter,

    var message;
    console.log(message);
    message = "The variable Has been hoisted";
    

    In the same fashion, function declarations are hoisted too

    message("Good morning"); //Good morning
    
    function message(name) {
      console.log(name);
    }
    

    This hoisting makes functions to be safely used in code before they are declared.

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  26. What are classes in ES6

    In ES6, Javascript classes are primarily syntactic sugar over JavaScript’s existing prototype-based inheritance. For example, the prototype based inheritance written in function expression as below,

    function Bike(model, color) {
      this.model = model;
      this.color = color;
    }
    
    Bike.prototype.getDetails = function () {
      return this.model + " bike has" + this.color + " color";
    };
    

    Whereas ES6 classes can be defined as an alternative

    class Bike {
      constructor(color, model) {
        this.color = color;
        this.model = model;
      }
    
      getDetails() {
        return this.model + " bike has" + this.color + " color";
      }
    }
    

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  27. What are closures

    A closure is the combination of a function bundled(enclosed) together with its lexical environment within which that function was declared. i.e, It is an inner function that has access to the outer or enclosing function’s variables, functions and other data even after the outer function has finished its execution. The closure has three scope chains.

    1. Own scope where variables defined between its curly brackets
    2. Outer function’s variables
    3. Global variables

    Let’s take an example of closure concept,

    function Welcome(name) {
      var greetingInfo = function (message) {
        console.log(message + " " + name);
      };
      return greetingInfo;
    }
    var myFunction = Welcome("John");
    myFunction("Welcome "); //Output: Welcome John
    myFunction("Hello Mr."); //output: Hello Mr. John
    

    As per the above code, the inner function(i.e, greetingInfo) has access to the variables in the outer function scope(i.e, Welcome) even after the outer function has returned.

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  28. What are modules

    Modules refer to small units of independent, reusable code and also act as the foundation of many JavaScript design patterns. Most of the JavaScript modules export an object literal, a function, or a constructor

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  29. Why do you need modules

    Below are the list of benefits using modules in javascript ecosystem

    1. Maintainability
    2. Reusability
    3. Namespacing

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  30. What is scope in javascript

    Scope is the accessibility of variables, functions, and objects in some particular part of your code during runtime. In other words, scope determines the visibility of variables and other resources in areas of your code.

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  31. What is a service worker

    A Service worker is basically a script (JavaScript file) that runs in the background, separate from a web page and provides features that don’t need a web page or user interaction. Some of the major features of service workers are Rich offline experiences(offline first web application development), periodic background syncs, push notifications, intercept and handle network requests and programmatically managing a cache of responses.

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  32. How do you manipulate DOM using a service worker

    Service worker can’t access the DOM directly. But it can communicate with the pages it controls by responding to messages sent via the postMessage interface, and those pages can manipulate the DOM.

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  33. How do you reuse information across service worker restarts

    The problem with service worker is that it gets terminated when not in use, and restarted when it’s next needed, so you cannot rely on global state within a service worker’s onfetch and onmessage handlers. In this case, service workers will have access to IndexedDB API in order to persist and reuse across restarts.

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  34. What is IndexedDB

    IndexedDB is a low-level API for client-side storage of larger amounts of structured data, including files/blobs. This API uses indexes to enable high-performance searches of this data.

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  35. What is web storage

    Web storage is an API that provides a mechanism by which browsers can store key/value pairs locally within the user’s browser, in a much more intuitive fashion than using cookies. The web storage provides two mechanisms for storing data on the client.

    1. Local storage: It stores data for current origin with no expiration date.
    2. Session storage: It stores data for one session and the data is lost when the browser tab is closed.

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  36. What is a post message

    Post message is a method that enables cross-origin communication between Window objects.(i.e, between a page and a pop-up that it spawned, or between a page and an iframe embedded within it). Generally, scripts on different pages are allowed to access each other if and only if the pages follow same-origin policy(i.e, pages share the same protocol, port number, and host).

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  37. What is a Cookie

    A cookie is a piece of data that is stored on your computer to be accessed by your browser. Cookies are saved as key/value pairs. For example, you can create a cookie named username as below,

    document.cookie = "username=John";
    

    Screenshot

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  38. Why do you need a Cookie

    Cookies are used to remember information about the user profile(such as username). It basically involves two steps,

    1. When a user visits a web page, the user profile can be stored in a cookie.
    2. Next time the user visits the page, the cookie remembers the user profile.

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  39. What are the options in a cookie

    There are few below options available for a cookie,

    1. By default, the cookie is deleted when the browser is closed but you can change this behavior by setting expiry date (in UTC time).
    document.cookie = "username=John; expires=Sat, 8 Jun 2019 12:00:00 UTC";
    
    1. By default, the cookie belongs to a current page. But you can tell the browser what path the cookie belongs to using a path parameter.
    document.cookie = "username=John; path=/services";
    

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  40. How do you delete a cookie

    You can delete a cookie by setting the expiry date as a passed date. You don’t need to specify a cookie value in this case. For example, you can delete a username cookie in the current page as below.

    document.cookie =
      "username=; expires=Fri, 07 Jun 2019 00:00:00 UTC; path=/;";
    

    Note: You should define the cookie path option to ensure that you delete the right cookie. Some browsers doesn’t allow to delete a cookie unless you specify a path parameter.

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  41. What are the differences between cookie, local storage and session storage

    Below are some of the differences between cookie, local storage and session storage,

    Feature Cookie Local storage Session storage
    Accessed on client or server side Both server-side & client-side. The set-cookie HTTP response header is used by server inorder to send it to user. client-side only client-side only
    Expiry Manually configured using Expires option Forever until deleted until tab is closed
    SSL support Supported Not supported Not supported
    Maximum data size 4KB 5 MB 5MB
    Accessible from Any window Any window Same tab
    Sent with requests Yes No No

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  42. What is the main difference between localStorage and sessionStorage

    LocalStorage is the same as SessionStorage but it persists the data even when the browser is closed and reopened(i.e it has no expiration time) whereas in sessionStorage data gets cleared when the page session ends.

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  43. How do you access web storage

    The Window object implements the WindowLocalStorage and WindowSessionStorage objects which has localStorage(window.localStorage) and sessionStorage(window.sessionStorage) properties respectively. These properties create an instance of the Storage object, through which data items can be set, retrieved and removed for a specific domain and storage type (session or local). For example, you can read and write on local storage objects as below

    localStorage.setItem("logo", document.getElementById("logo").value);
    localStorage.getItem("logo");
    

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  44. What are the methods available on session storage

    The session storage provided methods for reading, writing and clearing the session data

    // Save data to sessionStorage
    sessionStorage.setItem("key", "value");
    
    // Get saved data from sessionStorage
    let data = sessionStorage.getItem("key");
    
    // Remove saved data from sessionStorage
    sessionStorage.removeItem("key");
    
    // Remove all saved data from sessionStorage
    sessionStorage.clear();
    

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  45. What is a storage event and its event handler

    The StorageEvent is an event that fires when a storage area has been changed in the context of another document. Whereas onstorage property is an EventHandler for processing storage events. The syntax would be as below

    window.onstorage = functionRef;
    

    Let’s take the example usage of onstorage event handler which logs the storage key and it’s values

    window.onstorage = function (e) {
      console.log(
        "The " +
          e.key +
          " key has been changed from " +
          e.oldValue +
          " to " +
          e.newValue +
          "."
      );
    };
    

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  46. Why do you need web storage

    Web storage is more secure, and large amounts of data can be stored locally, without affecting website performance. Also, the information is never transferred to the server. Hence this is a more recommended approach than Cookies.

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  47. How do you check web storage browser support

    You need to check browser support for localStorage and sessionStorage before using web storage,

    if (typeof Storage !== "undefined") {
      // Code for localStorage/sessionStorage.
    } else {
      // Sorry! No Web Storage support..
    }
    

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  48. How do you check web workers browser support

    You need to check browser support for web workers before using it

    if (typeof Worker !== "undefined") {
      // code for Web worker support.
    } else {
      // Sorry! No Web Worker support..
    }
    

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  49. Give an example of a web worker

    You need to follow below steps to start using web workers for counting example

    1. Create a Web Worker File: You need to write a script to increment the count value. Let’s name it as counter.js
    let i = 0;
    
    function timedCount() {
      i = i + 1;
      postMessage(i);
      setTimeout("timedCount()", 500);
    }
    
    timedCount();
    

    Here postMessage() method is used to post a message back to the HTML page

    1. Create a Web Worker Object: You can create a web worker object by checking for browser support. Let’s name this file as web_worker_example.js
    if (typeof w == "undefined") {
      w = new Worker("counter.js");
    }
    

    and we can receive messages from web worker

    w.onmessage = function (event) {
      document.getElementById("message").innerHTML = event.data;
    };
    
    1. Terminate a Web Worker: Web workers will continue to listen for messages (even after the external script is finished) until it is terminated. You can use the terminate() method to terminate listening to the messages.
    w.terminate();
    
    1. Reuse the Web Worker: If you set the worker variable to undefined you can reuse the code
    w = undefined;
    

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  50. What are the restrictions of web workers on DOM

    WebWorkers don’t have access to below javascript objects since they are defined in an external files

    1. Window object
    2. Document object
    3. Parent object

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  51. What is a promise

    A promise is an object that may produce a single value some time in the future with either a resolved value or a reason that it’s not resolved(for example, network error). It will be in one of the 3 possible states: fulfilled, rejected, or pending.

    The syntax of Promise creation looks like below,

    const promise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      // promise description
    });
    

    The usage of a promise would be as below,

    const promise = new Promise(
      (resolve) => {
        setTimeout(() => {
          resolve("I'm a Promise!");
        }, 5000);
      },
      (reject) => {}
    );
    
    promise.then((value) => console.log(value));
    

    The action flow of a promise will be as below,

    Screenshot

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  52. Why do you need a promise

    Promises are used to handle asynchronous operations. They provide an alternative approach for callbacks by reducing the callback hell and writing the cleaner code.

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  53. What are the three states of promise

    Promises have three states:

    1. Pending: This is an initial state of the Promise before an operation begins
    2. Fulfilled: This state indicates that the specified operation was completed.
    3. Rejected: This state indicates that the operation did not complete. In this case an error value will be thrown.

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  54. What is a callback function

    A callback function is a function passed into another function as an argument. This function is invoked inside the outer function to complete an action. Let’s take a simple example of how to use callback function

    function callbackFunction(name) {
      console.log("Hello " + name);
    }
    
    function outerFunction(callback) {
      let name = prompt("Please enter your name.");
      callback(name);
    }
    
    outerFunction(callbackFunction);
    

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  55. Why do we need callbacks

    The callbacks are needed because javascript is an event driven language. That means instead of waiting for a response javascript will keep executing while listening for other events. Let’s take an example with the first function invoking an API call(simulated by setTimeout) and the next function which logs the message.

    function firstFunction() {
      // Simulate a code delay
      setTimeout(function () {
        console.log("First function called");
      }, 1000);
    }
    function secondFunction() {
      console.log("Second function called");
    }
    firstFunction();
    secondFunction();
    
    Output;
    // Second function called
    // First function called
    

    As observed from the output, javascript didn’t wait for the response of the first function and the remaining code block got executed. So callbacks are used in a way to make sure that certain code doesn’t execute until the other code finishes execution.

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  56. What is a callback hell

    Callback Hell is an anti-pattern with multiple nested callbacks which makes code hard to read and debug when dealing with asynchronous logic. The callback hell looks like below,

    async1(function(){
        async2(function(){
            async3(function(){
                async4(function(){
                    ....
                });
            });
        });
    });
    

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  57. What are server-sent events

    Server-sent events (SSE) is a server push technology enabling a browser to receive automatic updates from a server via HTTP connection without resorting to polling. These are a one way communications channel - events flow from server to client only. This has been used in Facebook/Twitter updates, stock price updates, news feeds etc.

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  58. How do you receive server-sent event notifications

    The EventSource object is used to receive server-sent event notifications. For example, you can receive messages from server as below,

    if (typeof EventSource !== "undefined") {
      var source = new EventSource("sse_generator.js");
      source.onmessage = function (event) {
        document.getElementById("output").innerHTML += event.data + "<br>";
      };
    }
    

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  59. How do you check browser support for server-sent events

    You can perform browser support for server-sent events before using it as below,

    if (typeof EventSource !== "undefined") {
      // Server-sent events supported. Let's have some code here!
    } else {
      // No server-sent events supported
    }
    

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  60. What are the events available for server sent events

    Below are the list of events available for server sent events | Event | Description | |—- | ——— | onopen | It is used when a connection to the server is opened | | onmessage | This event is used when a message is received | | onerror | It happens when an error occurs|

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  61. What are the main rules of promise

    A promise must follow a specific set of rules:

    1. A promise is an object that supplies a standard-compliant .then() method
    2. A pending promise may transition into either fulfilled or rejected state
    3. A fulfilled or rejected promise is settled and it must not transition into any other state.
    4. Once a promise is settled, the value must not change.

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  62. What is callback in callback

    You can nest one callback inside in another callback to execute the actions sequentially one by one. This is known as callbacks in callbacks.

    loadScript("/script1.js", function (script) {
      console.log("first script is loaded");
    
      loadScript("/script2.js", function (script) {
        console.log("second script is loaded");
    
        loadScript("/script3.js", function (script) {
          console.log("third script is loaded");
          // after all scripts are loaded
        });
      });
    });
    

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  63. What is promise chaining

    The process of executing a sequence of asynchronous tasks one after another using promises is known as Promise chaining. Let’s take an example of promise chaining for calculating the final result,

    new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      setTimeout(() => resolve(1), 1000);
    })
      .then(function (result) {
        console.log(result); // 1
        return result * 2;
      })
      .then(function (result) {
        console.log(result); // 2
        return result * 3;
      })
      .then(function (result) {
        console.log(result); // 6
        return result * 4;
      });
    

    In the above handlers, the result is passed to the chain of .then() handlers with the below work flow,

    1. The initial promise resolves in 1 second,
    2. After that .then handler is called by logging the result(1) and then return a promise with the value of result * 2.
    3. After that the value passed to the next .then handler by logging the result(2) and return a promise with result * 3.
    4. Finally the value passed to the last .then handler by logging the result(6) and return a promise with result * 4.

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  64. What is promise.all

    Promise.all is a promise that takes an array of promises as an input (an iterable), and it gets resolved when all the promises get resolved or any one of them gets rejected. For example, the syntax of promise.all method is below,

    Promise.all([Promise1, Promise2, Promise3]) .then(result) => {   console.log(result) }) .catch(error => console.log(`Error in promises ${error}`))
    

    Note: Remember that the order of the promises(output the result) is maintained as per input order.

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  65. What is the purpose of the race method in promise

    Promise.race() method will return the promise instance which is firstly resolved or rejected. Let’s take an example of race() method where promise2 is resolved first

    var promise1 = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      setTimeout(resolve, 500, "one");
    });
    var promise2 = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      setTimeout(resolve, 100, "two");
    });
    
    Promise.race([promise1, promise2]).then(function (value) {
      console.log(value); // "two" // Both promises will resolve, but promise2 is faster
    });
    

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  66. What is a strict mode in javascript

    Strict Mode is a new feature in ECMAScript 5 that allows you to place a program, or a function, in a “strict” operating context. This way it prevents certain actions from being taken and throws more exceptions. The literal expression "use strict"; instructs the browser to use the javascript code in the Strict mode.

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  67. Why do you need strict mode

    Strict mode is useful to write “secure” JavaScript by notifying “bad syntax” into real errors. For example, it eliminates accidentally creating a global variable by throwing an error and also throws an error for assignment to a non-writable property, a getter-only property, a non-existing property, a non-existing variable, or a non-existing object.

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  68. How do you declare strict mode

    The strict mode is declared by adding “use strict”; to the beginning of a script or a function. If declared at the beginning of a script, it has global scope.

    "use strict";
    x = 3.14; // This will cause an error because x is not declared
    

    and if you declare inside a function, it has local scope

    x = 3.14; // This will not cause an error.
    myFunction();
    
    function myFunction() {
      "use strict";
      y = 3.14; // This will cause an error
    }
    

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  69. What is the purpose of double exclamation

    The double exclamation or negation(!!) ensures the resulting type is a boolean. If it was falsey (e.g. 0, null, undefined, etc.), it will be false, otherwise, it will be true. For example, you can test IE version using this expression as below,

    let isIE8 = false;
    isIE8 = !!navigator.userAgent.match(/MSIE 8.0/);
    console.log(isIE8); // returns true or false
    

    If you don’t use this expression then it returns the original value.

    console.log(navigator.userAgent.match(/MSIE 8.0/)); // returns either an Array or null
    

    Note: The expression !! is not an operator, but it is just twice of ! operator.

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  70. What is the purpose of the delete operator

    The delete operator is used to delete the property as well as its value.

    var user = { firstName: "John", lastName:"Doe", age: 20 };
    delete user.age;
    
    console.log(user); // {firstName: "John", lastName:"Doe"}
    

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  71. What is typeof operator

    You can use the JavaScript typeof operator to find the type of a JavaScript variable. It returns the type of a variable or an expression.

    typeof "John Abraham"; // Returns "string"
    typeof (1 + 2); // Returns "number"
    typeof [1, 2, 3]; // Returns "object" because all arrays are also objects
    

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  72. What is undefined property

    The undefined property indicates that a variable has not been assigned a value, or declared but not initialized at all. The type of undefined value is undefined too.

    var user; // Value is undefined, type is undefined
    console.log(typeof user); //undefined
    

    Any variable can be emptied by setting the value to undefined.

    user = undefined;
    

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  73. What is null value

    The value null represents the intentional absence of any object value. It is one of JavaScript’s primitive values. The type of null value is object. You can empty the variable by setting the value to null.

    var user = null;
    console.log(typeof user); //object
    

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  74. What is the difference between null and undefined

    Below are the main differences between null and undefined,

    Null Undefined
    It is an assignment value which indicates that variable points to no object. It is not an assignment value where a variable has been declared but has not yet been assigned a value.
    Type of null is object Type of undefined is undefined
    The null value is a primitive value that represents the null, empty, or non-existent reference. The undefined value is a primitive value used when a variable has not been assigned a value.
    Indicates the absence of a value for a variable Indicates absence of variable itself
    Converted to zero (0) while performing primitive operations Converted to NaN while performing primitive operations

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  75. What is eval

    The eval() function evaluates JavaScript code represented as a string. The string can be a JavaScript expression, variable, statement, or sequence of statements.

    console.log(eval("1 + 2")); //  3
    

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  76. What is the difference between window and document

    Below are the main differences between window and document,

    Window Document
    It is the root level element in any web page It is the direct child of the window object. This is also known as Document Object Model(DOM)
    By default window object is available implicitly in the page You can access it via window.document or document.
    It has methods like alert(), confirm() and properties like document, location It provides methods like getElementById, getElementsByTagName, createElement etc

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  77. How do you access history in javascript

    The window.history object contains the browser’s history. You can load previous and next URLs in the history using back() and next() methods.

    function goBack() {
      window.history.back();
    }
    function goForward() {
      window.history.forward();
    }
    

    Note: You can also access history without window prefix.

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  78. How do you detect caps lock key turned on or not

    The mouseEvent getModifierState() is used to return a boolean value that indicates whether the specified modifier key is activated or not. The modifiers such as CapsLock, ScrollLock and NumLock are activated when they are clicked, and deactivated when they are clicked again.

    Let’s take an input element to detect the CapsLock on/off behavior with an example,

    <input type="password" onmousedown="enterInput(event)" />
    
    <p id="feedback"></p>
    
    <script>
      function enterInput(e) {
        var flag = e.getModifierState("CapsLock");
        if (flag) {
          document.getElementById("feedback").innerHTML = "CapsLock activated";
        } else {
          document.getElementById("feedback").innerHTML =
            "CapsLock not activated";
        }
      }
    </script>
    

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  79. What is isNaN

    The isNaN() function is used to determine whether a value is an illegal number (Not-a-Number) or not. i.e, This function returns true if the value equates to NaN. Otherwise it returns false.

    isNaN("Hello"); //true
    isNaN("100"); //false
    

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  80. What are the differences between undeclared and undefined variables

    Below are the major differences between undeclared(not defined) and undefined variables,

    undeclared undefined
    These variables do not exist in a program and are not declared These variables declared in the program but have not assigned any value
    If you try to read the value of an undeclared variable, then a runtime error is encountered If you try to read the value of an undefined variable, an undefined value is returned.

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  81. What are global variables

    Global variables are those that are available throughout the length of the code without any scope. The var keyword is used to declare a local variable but if you omit it then it will become global variable

    msg = "Hello"; // var is missing, it becomes global variable
    

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  82. What are the problems with global variables

    The problem with global variables is the conflict of variable names of local and global scope. It is also difficult to debug and test the code that relies on global variables.

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  83. What is NaN property

    The NaN property is a global property that represents “Not-a-Number” value. i.e, It indicates that a value is not a legal number. It is very rare to use NaN in a program but it can be used as return value for few cases

    Math.sqrt(-1);
    parseInt("Hello");
    

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  84. What is the purpose of isFinite function

    The isFinite() function is used to determine whether a number is a finite, legal number. It returns false if the value is +infinity, -infinity, or NaN (Not-a-Number), otherwise it returns true.

    isFinite(Infinity); // false
    isFinite(NaN); // false
    isFinite(-Infinity); // false
    
    isFinite(100); // true
    

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  85. What is an event flow

    Event flow is the order in which event is received on the web page. When you click an element that is nested in various other elements, before your click actually reaches its destination, or target element, it must trigger the click event for each of its parent elements first, starting at the top with the global window object.

    There are two ways of event flow

    1. Top to Bottom(Event Capturing)
    2. Bottom to Top (Event Bubbling)

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  86. What is event bubbling

    Event bubbling is a type of event propagation where the event first triggers on the innermost target element, and then successively triggers on the ancestors (parents) of the target element in the same nesting hierarchy till it reaches the outermost DOM element(i.e, global window object).

    By default, event handlers triggered in event bubbling phase as shown below,

    <div>
      <button class="child">Hello</button>
    </div>
    
    <script>
      const parent = document.querySelector("div");
      const child = document.querySelector(".child");
    
      parent.addEventListener("click",
        function () {
          console.log("Parent");
        }
      );
    
      child.addEventListener("click", function () {
        console.log("Child");
      });
    </script>
    // Child
    // Parent
    

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  87. What is event capturing

    Event capturing is a type of event propagation where the event is first captured by the outermost element, and then successively triggers on the descendants (children) of the target element in the same nesting hierarchy till it reaches the innermost target DOM element.

    You need to pass true value for addEventListener method to trigger event handlers in event capturing phase.

    <div>
      <button class="child">Hello</button>
    </div>
    
    <script>
      const parent = document.querySelector("div");
      const child = document.querySelector(".child");
    
      parent.addEventListener("click",
        function () {
          console.log("Parent");
        },
        true
      );
    
      child.addEventListener("click", function () {
        console.log("Child");
      });
    </script>
    // Parent
    // Child
    

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  88. How do you submit a form using JavaScript

    You can submit a form using document.forms[0].submit(). All the form input’s information is submitted using onsubmit event handler

    function submit() {
      document.forms[0].submit();
    }
    

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  89. How do you find operating system details

    The window.navigator object contains information about the visitor’s browser OS details. Some of the OS properties are available under platform property,

    console.log(navigator.platform);
    

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  90. What is the difference between document load and DOMContentLoaded events

    The DOMContentLoaded event is fired when the initial HTML document has been completely loaded and parsed, without waiting for assets(stylesheets, images, and subframes) to finish loading. Whereas The load event is fired when the whole page has loaded, including all dependent resources(stylesheets, images).

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  91. What is the difference between native, host and user objects

    Native objects are objects that are part of the JavaScript language defined by the ECMAScript specification. For example, String, Math, RegExp, Object, Function etc core objects defined in the ECMAScript spec. Host objects are objects provided by the browser or runtime environment (Node).

    For example, window, XmlHttpRequest, DOM nodes etc are considered as host objects. User objects are objects defined in the javascript code. For example, User objects created for profile information.

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  92. What are the tools or techniques used for debugging JavaScript code

    You can use below tools or techniques for debugging javascript

    1. Chrome Devtools
    2. debugger statement
    3. Good old console.log statement

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  93. What are the pros and cons of promises over callbacks

    Below are the list of pros and cons of promises over callbacks,

    Pros:

    1. It avoids callback hell which is unreadable
    2. Easy to write sequential asynchronous code with .then()
    3. Easy to write parallel asynchronous code with Promise.all()
    4. Solves some of the common problems of callbacks(call the callback too late, too early, many times and swallow errors/exceptions)

    Cons:

    1. It makes little complex code
    2. You need to load a polyfill if ES6 is not supported

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  94. What is the difference between an attribute and a property

    Attributes are defined on the HTML markup whereas properties are defined on the DOM. For example, the below HTML element has 2 attributes type and value,

    <input type="text" value="Name:">
    

    You can retrieve the attribute value as below,

    const input = document.querySelector("input");
    console.log(input.getAttribute("value")); // Good morning
    console.log(input.value); // Good morning
    

    And after you change the value of the text field to “Good evening”, it becomes like

    console.log(input.getAttribute("value")); // Good evening
    console.log(input.value); // Good evening
    

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  95. What is same-origin policy

    The same-origin policy is a policy that prevents JavaScript from making requests across domain boundaries. An origin is defined as a combination of URI scheme, hostname, and port number. If you enable this policy then it prevents a malicious script on one page from obtaining access to sensitive data on another web page using Document Object Model(DOM).

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  96. What is the purpose of void 0

    Void(0) is used to prevent the page from refreshing. This will be helpful to eliminate the unwanted side-effect, because it will return the undefined primitive value. It is commonly used for HTML documents that use href=“JavaScript:Void(0);” within an <a> element. i.e, when you click a link, the browser loads a new page or refreshes the same page. But this behavior will be prevented using this expression. For example, the below link notify the message without reloading the page

    <a href="JavaScript:void(0);" onclick="alert('Well done!')">
      Click Me!
    </a>
    

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  97. Is JavaScript a compiled or interpreted language

    JavaScript is an interpreted language, not a compiled language. An interpreter in the browser reads over the JavaScript code, interprets each line, and runs it. Nowadays modern browsers use a technology known as Just-In-Time (JIT) compilation, which compiles JavaScript to executable bytecode just as it is about to run.

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  98. Is JavaScript a case-sensitive language

    Yes, JavaScript is a case sensitive language. The language keywords, variables, function & object names, and any other identifiers must always be typed with a consistent capitalization of letters.

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  99. Is there any relation between Java and JavaScript

    No, they are entirely two different programming languages and have nothing to do with each other. But both of them are Object Oriented Programming languages and like many other languages, they follow similar syntax for basic features(if, else, for, switch, break, continue etc).

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  100. What are events

    Events are “things” that happen to HTML elements. When JavaScript is used in HTML pages, JavaScript can react on these events. Some of the examples of HTML events are,

    1. Web page has finished loading
    2. Input field was changed
    3. Button was clicked

    Let’s describe the behavior of click event for button element,

    <!doctype html>
    <html>
     <head>
       <script>
         function greeting() {
           alert('Hello! Good morning');
         }
       </script>
     </head>
     <body>
       <button type="button" onclick="greeting()">Click me</button>
     </body>
    </html>
    

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  101. Who created javascript

    JavaScript was created by Brendan Eich in 1995 during his time at Netscape Communications. Initially it was developed under the name Mocha, but later the language was officially called LiveScript when it first shipped in beta releases of Netscape.

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  102. What is the use of preventDefault method

    The preventDefault() method cancels the event if it is cancelable, meaning that the default action or behaviour that belongs to the event will not occur. For example, prevent form submission when clicking on submit button and prevent opening the page URL when clicking on hyperlink are some common use cases.

    document
      .getElementById("link")
      .addEventListener("click", function (event) {
        event.preventDefault();
      });
    

    Note: Remember that not all events are cancelable.

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  103. What is the use of stopPropagation method

    The stopPropagation method is used to stop the event from bubbling up the event chain. For example, the below nested divs with stopPropagation method prevents default event propagation when clicking on nested div(Div1)

    <p>Click DIV1 Element</p>
    <div onclick="secondFunc()">DIV 2
      <div onclick="firstFunc(event)">DIV 1</div>
    </div>
    
    <script>
    function firstFunc(event) {
      alert("DIV 1");
      event.stopPropagation();
    }
    
    function secondFunc() {
      alert("DIV 2");
    }
    </script>
    

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  104. What are the steps involved in return false usage

    The return false statement in event handlers performs the below steps,

    1. First it stops the browser’s default action or behaviour.
    2. It prevents the event from propagating the DOM
    3. Stops callback execution and returns immediately when called.

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  105. What is BOM

    The Browser Object Model (BOM) allows JavaScript to “talk to” the browser. It consists of the objects navigator, history, screen, location and document which are children of the window. The Browser Object Model is not standardized and can change based on different browsers.

    Screenshot

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  106. What is the use of setTimeout

    The setTimeout() method is used to call a function or evaluate an expression after a specified number of milliseconds. For example, let’s log a message after 2 seconds using setTimeout method,

    setTimeout(function () {
      console.log("Good morning");
    }, 2000);
    

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  107. What is the use of setInterval

    The setInterval() method is used to call a function or evaluate an expression at specified intervals (in milliseconds). For example, let’s log a message after 2 seconds using setInterval method,

    setInterval(function () {
      console.log("Good morning");
    }, 2000);
    

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  108. Why is JavaScript treated as Single threaded

    JavaScript is a single-threaded language. Because the language specification does not allow the programmer to write code so that the interpreter can run parts of it in parallel in multiple threads or processes. Whereas languages like java, go, C++ can make multi-threaded and multi-process programs.

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  109. What is an event delegation

    Event delegation is a technique for listening to events where you delegate a parent element as the listener for all of the events that happen inside it.

    For example, if you wanted to detect field changes inside a specific form, you can use event delegation technique,

    var form = document.querySelector("#registration-form");
    
    // Listen for changes to fields inside the form
    form.addEventListener(
      "input",
      function (event) {
        // Log the field that was changed
        console.log(event.target);
      },
      false
    );
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  110. What is ECMAScript

    ECMAScript is the scripting language that forms the basis of JavaScript. ECMAScript standardized by the ECMA International standards organization in the ECMA-262 and ECMA-402 specifications. The first edition of ECMAScript was released in 1997.

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  111. What is JSON

    JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight format that is used for data interchanging. It is based on a subset of JavaScript language in the way objects are built in JavaScript.

    ⬆ Back to Top

  112. What are the syntax rules of JSON

    Below are the list of syntax rules of JSON

    1. The data is in name/value pairs
    2. The data is separated by commas
    3. Curly braces hold objects
    4. Square brackets hold arrays

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  113. What is the purpose JSON stringify

    When sending data to a web server, the data has to be in a string format. You can achieve this by converting JSON object into a string using stringify() method.

    var userJSON = { name: "John", age: 31 };
    var userString = JSON.stringify(userJSON);
    console.log(userString); //"{"name":"John","age":31}"
    

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  114. How do you parse JSON string

    When receiving the data from a web server, the data is always in a string format. But you can convert this string value to a javascript object using parse() method.

    var userString = '{"name":"John","age":31}';
    var userJSON = JSON.parse(userString);
    console.log(userJSON); // {name: "John", age: 31}
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  115. Why do you need JSON

    When exchanging data between a browser and a server, the data can only be text. Since JSON is text only, it can easily be sent to and from a server, and used as a data format by any programming language.

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  116. What are PWAs

    Progressive web applications (PWAs) are a type of mobile app delivered through the web, built using common web technologies including HTML, CSS and JavaScript. These PWAs are deployed to servers, accessible through URLs, and indexed by search engines.

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  117. What is the purpose of clearTimeout method

    The clearTimeout() function is used in javascript to clear the timeout which has been set by setTimeout()function before that. i.e, The return value of setTimeout() function is stored in a variable and it’s passed into the clearTimeout() function to clear the timer.

    For example, the below setTimeout method is used to display the message after 3 seconds. This timeout can be cleared by the clearTimeout() method.

    <script>
         var msg;
         function greeting() {
            alert('Good morning');
         }
         function start() {
           msg =setTimeout(greeting, 3000);
    
         }
    
         function stop() {
             clearTimeout(msg);
         }
    </script>
    

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  118. What is the purpose of clearInterval method

    The clearInterval() function is used in javascript to clear the interval which has been set by setInterval() function. i.e, The return value returned by setInterval() function is stored in a variable and it’s passed into the clearInterval() function to clear the interval.

    For example, the below setInterval method is used to display the message for every 3 seconds. This interval can be cleared by the clearInterval() method.

    <script>
         var msg;
         function greeting() {
            alert('Good morning');
         }
         function start() {
           msg = setInterval(greeting, 3000);
    
         }
    
         function stop() {
             clearInterval(msg);
         }
    </script>
    

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  119. How do you redirect new page in javascript

    In vanilla javascript, you can redirect to a new page using the location property of window object. The syntax would be as follows,

    function redirect() {
      window.location.href = "newPage.html";
    }
    

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  120. How do you check whether a string contains a substring

    There are 3 possible ways to check whether a string contains a substring or not,

    1. Using includes: ES6 provided String.prototype.includes method to test a string contains a substring
    var mainString = "hello",
      subString = "hell";
    mainString.includes(subString);
    
    1. Using indexOf: In an ES5 or older environment, you can use String.prototype.indexOf which returns the index of a substring. If the index value is not equal to -1 then it means the substring exists in the main string.
    var mainString = "hello",
      subString = "hell";
    mainString.indexOf(subString) !== -1;
    
    1. Using RegEx: The advanced solution is using Regular expression’s test method(RegExp.test), which allows for testing for against regular expressions
    var mainString = "hello",
      regex = /hell/;
    regex.test(mainString);
    

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  121. How do you validate an email in javascript

    You can validate an email in javascript using regular expressions. It is recommended to do validations on the server side instead of the client side. Because the javascript can be disabled on the client side.

    function validateEmail(email) {
      var re =
        /^(([^<>()\[\]\\.,;:\s@"]+(\.[^<>()\[\]\\.,;:\s@"]+)*)|(".+"))@((\[[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}\])|(([a-zA-Z\-0-9]+\.)+[a-zA-Z]{2,}))$/;
      return re.test(String(email).toLowerCase());
    }
    

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    The above regular expression accepts unicode characters.

  122. How do you get the current url with javascript

    You can use window.location.href expression to get the current url path and you can use the same expression for updating the URL too. You can also use document.URL for read-only purposes but this solution has issues in FF.

    console.log("location.href", window.location.href); // Returns full URL
    

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  123. What are the various url properties of location object

    The below Location object properties can be used to access URL components of the page,

    1. href - The entire URL
    2. protocol - The protocol of the URL
    3. host - The hostname and port of the URL
    4. hostname - The hostname of the URL
    5. port - The port number in the URL
    6. pathname - The path name of the URL
    7. search - The query portion of the URL
    8. hash - The anchor portion of the URL

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  124. How do get query string values in javascript

    You can use URLSearchParams to get query string values in javascript. Let’s see an example to get the client code value from URL query string,

    const urlParams = new URLSearchParams(window.location.search);
    const clientCode = urlParams.get("clientCode");
    

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  125. How do you check if a key exists in an object

    You can check whether a key exists in an object or not using three approaches,

    1. Using in operator: You can use the in operator whether a key exists in an object or not

      "key" in obj;
      

      and If you want to check if a key doesn’t exist, remember to use parenthesis,

      !("key" in obj);
      
    2. Using hasOwnProperty method: You can use hasOwnProperty to particularly test for properties of the object instance (and not inherited properties)

      obj.hasOwnProperty("key"); // true
      
    3. Using undefined comparison: If you access a non-existing property from an object, the result is undefined. Let’s compare the properties against undefined to determine the existence of the property.

      const user = {
        name: "John",
      };
      
      console.log(user.name !== undefined); // true
      console.log(user.nickName !== undefined); // false
      

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  126. How do you loop through or enumerate javascript object

    You can use the for-in loop to loop through javascript object. You can also make sure that the key you get is an actual property of an object, and doesn’t come from the prototype using hasOwnProperty method.

    var object = {
      k1: "value1",
      k2: "value2",
      k3: "value3",
    };
    
    for (var key in object) {
      if (object.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
        console.log(key + " -> " + object[key]); // k1 -> value1 ...
      }
    }
    

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  127. How do you test for an empty object

    There are different solutions based on ECMAScript versions

    1. Using Object entries(ECMA 7+): You can use object entries length along with constructor type.
    Object.entries(obj).length === 0 && obj.constructor === Object; // Since date object length is 0, you need to check constructor check as well
    
    1. Using Object keys(ECMA 5+): You can use object keys length along with constructor type.
    Object.keys(obj).length === 0 && obj.constructor === Object; // Since date object length is 0, you need to check constructor check as well
    
    1. Using for-in with hasOwnProperty(Pre-ECMA 5): You can use a for-in loop along with hasOwnProperty.
    function isEmpty(obj) {
      for (var prop in obj) {
        if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
          return false;
        }
      }
    
      return JSON.stringify(obj) === JSON.stringify({});
    }
    

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  128. What is an arguments object

    The arguments object is an Array-like object accessible inside functions that contains the values of the arguments passed to that function. For example, let’s see how to use arguments object inside sum function,

    function sum() {
      var total = 0;
      for (var i = 0, len = arguments.length; i < len; ++i) {
        total += arguments[i];
      }
      return total;
    }
    
    sum(1, 2, 3); // returns 6
    

    Note: You can’t apply array methods on arguments object. But you can convert into a regular array as below.

    var argsArray = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
    

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  129. How do you make first letter of the string in an uppercase

    You can create a function which uses a chain of string methods such as charAt, toUpperCase and slice methods to generate a string with the first letter in uppercase.

    function capitalizeFirstLetter(string) {
      return string.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + string.slice(1);
    }
    

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  130. What are the pros and cons of for loops

    The for-loop is a commonly used iteration syntax in javascript. It has both pros and cons

    #### Pros

    1. Works on every environment
    2. You can use break and continue flow control statements

    #### Cons

    1. Too verbose
    2. Imperative
    3. You might face off-by-one errors.

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  131. How do you display the current date in javascript

    You can use new Date() to generate a new Date object containing the current date and time. For example, let’s display the current date in mm/dd/yyyy

    var today = new Date();
    var dd = String(today.getDate()).padStart(2, "0");
    var mm = String(today.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, "0"); //January is 0!
    var yyyy = today.getFullYear();
    
    today = mm + "/" + dd + "/" + yyyy;
    document.write(today);
    

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  132. How do you compare two date objects

    You need to use date.getTime() method to compare date values instead of comparison operators (==, !=, ===, and !== operators)

    var d1 = new Date();
    var d2 = new Date(d1);
    console.log(d1.getTime() === d2.getTime()); //True
    console.log(d1 === d2); // False
    

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  133. How do you check if a string starts with another string

    You can use ECMAScript 6’s String.prototype.startsWith() method to check if a string starts with another string or not. But it is not yet supported in all browsers. Let’s see an example to see this usage,

    "Good morning".startsWith("Good"); // true
    "Good morning".startsWith("morning"); // false
    

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  134. How do you trim a string in javascript

    JavaScript provided a trim method on string types to trim any whitespaces present at the beginning or ending of the string.

    "  Hello World   ".trim(); //Hello World
    

    If your browser(<IE9) doesn’t support this method then you can use below polyfill.

    if (!String.prototype.trim) {
      (function () {
        // Make sure we trim BOM and NBSP
        var rtrim = /^[\s\uFEFF\xA0]+|[\s\uFEFF\xA0]+$/g;
        String.prototype.trim = function () {
          return this.replace(rtrim, "");
        };
      })();
    }
    

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  135. How do you add a key value pair in javascript

    There are two possible solutions to add new properties to an object.

    Let’s take a simple object to explain these solutions.

    var object = {
      key1: value1,
      key2: value2,
    };
    
    1. Using dot notation: This solution is useful when you know the name of the property
    object.key3 = "value3";
    
    1. Using square bracket notation: This solution is useful when the name of the property is dynamically determined.
    obj["key3"] = "value3";
    

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  136. Is the !– notation represents a special operator

    No,that’s not a special operator. But it is a combination of 2 standard operators one after the other,

    1. A logical not (!)
    2. A prefix decrement (–)

    At first, the value decremented by one and then tested to see if it is equal to zero or not for determining the truthy/falsy value.

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  137. How do you assign default values to variables

    You can use the logical or operator || in an assignment expression to provide a default value. The syntax looks like as below,

    var a = b || c;
    

    As per the above expression, variable ’a ’will get the value of ‘c’ only if ‘b’ is falsy (if is null, false, undefined, 0, empty string, or NaN), otherwise ‘a’ will get the value of ‘b’.

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  138. How do you define multiline strings

    You can define multiline string literals using the ‘\n’ character followed by line terminator(’').

    var str =
      "This is a \n\ very lengthy \n\ sentence!";
    console.log(str);
    

    But if you have a space after the ‘\n’ character, there will be indentation inconsistencies.

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  139. What is an app shell model

    An application shell (or app shell) architecture is one way to build a Progressive Web App that reliably and instantly loads on your users’ screens, similar to what you see in native applications. It is useful for getting some initial HTML to the screen fast without a network.

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  140. Can we define properties for functions

    Yes, We can define properties for functions because functions are also objects.

    fn = function (x) {
      //Function code goes here
    };
    
    fn.name = "John";
    
    fn.profile = function (y) {
      //Profile code goes here
    };
    

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  141. What is the way to find the number of parameters expected by a function

    You can use function.length syntax to find the number of parameters expected by a function. Let’s take an example of sum function to calculate the sum of numbers,

    function sum(num1, num2, num3, num4) {
      return num1 + num2 + num3 + num4;
    }
    sum.length; // 4 is the number of parameters expected.
    

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  142. What is a polyfill

    A polyfill is a piece of JS code used to provide modern functionality on older browsers that do not natively support it. For example, Silverlight plugin polyfill can be used to mimic the functionality of an HTML Canvas element on Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.

    There are two main polyfill libraries available, 1. Core.js: It is a modular javascript library used for cutting-edge ECMAScript features. 2. Polyfill.io: It provides polyfills that are required for browser needs.

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  143. What are break and continue statements

    The break statement is used to “jump out” of a loop. i.e, It breaks the loop and continues executing the code after the loop.

    for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
      if (i === 5) {
        break;
      }
      text += "Number: " + i + "<br>";
    }
    

    The continue statement is used to “jump over” one iteration in the loop. i.e, It breaks one iteration (in the loop), if a specified condition occurs, and continues with the next iteration in the loop.

    for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
      if (i === 5) {
        continue;
      }
      text += "Number: " + i + "<br>";
    }
    

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  144. What are js labels

    The label statement allows us to name loops and blocks in JavaScript. We can then use these labels to refer back to the code later. For example, the below code with labels avoids printing the numbers when they are same,

    var i, j;
    
    loop1: for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
      loop2: for (j = 0; j < 3; j++) {
        if (i === j) {
          continue loop1;
        }
        console.log("i = " + i + ", j = " + j);
      }
    }
    
    // Output is:
    //   "i = 1, j = 0"
    //   "i = 2, j = 0"
    //   "i = 2, j = 1"
    

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  145. What are the benefits of keeping declarations at the top

    It is recommended to keep all declarations at the top of each script or function. The benefits of doing this are,

    1. Gives cleaner code
    2. It provides a single place to look for local variables
    3. Easy to avoid unwanted global variables
    4. It reduces the possibility of unwanted re-declarations

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  146. What are the benefits of initializing variables

    It is recommended to initialize variables because of the below benefits,

    1. It gives cleaner code
    2. It provides a single place to initialize variables
    3. Avoid undefined values in the code

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  147. What are the recommendations to create new object

    It is recommended to avoid creating new objects using new Object(). Instead you can initialize values based on it’s type to create the objects.

    1. Assign {} instead of new Object()
    2. Assign "" instead of new String()
    3. Assign 0 instead of new Number()
    4. Assign false instead of new Boolean()
    5. Assign [] instead of new Array()
    6. Assign /()/ instead of new RegExp()
    7. Assign function (){} instead of new Function()

    You can define them as an example,

    var v1 = {};
    var v2 = "";
    var v3 = 0;
    var v4 = false;
    var v5 = [];
    var v6 = /()/;
    var v7 = function () {};
    

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  148. How do you define JSON arrays

    JSON arrays are written inside square brackets and arrays contain javascript objects. For example, the JSON array of users would be as below,

    "users":[
      {"firstName":"John", "lastName":"Abrahm"},
      {"firstName":"Anna", "lastName":"Smith"},
      {"firstName":"Shane", "lastName":"Warn"}
    ]
    

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  149. How do you generate random integers

    You can use Math.random() with Math.floor() to return random integers. For example, if you want generate random integers between 1 to 10, the multiplication factor should be 10,

    Math.floor(Math.random() * 10) + 1; // returns a random integer from 1 to 10
    Math.floor(Math.random() * 100) + 1; // returns a random integer from 1 to 100
    

    Note: Math.random() returns a random number between 0 (inclusive), and 1 (exclusive)

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  150. Can you write a random integers function to print integers within a range

    Yes, you can create a proper random function to return a random number between min and max (both included)

    function randomInteger(min, max) {
      return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
    }
    randomInteger(1, 100); // returns a random integer from 1 to 100
    randomInteger(1, 1000); // returns a random integer from 1 to 1000
    

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  151. What is tree shaking

    Tree shaking is a form of dead code elimination. It means that unused modules will not be included in the bundle during the build process and for that it relies on the static structure of ES2015 module syntax,( i.e. import and export). Initially this has been popularized by the ES2015 module bundler rollup.

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  152. What is the need of tree shaking

    Tree Shaking can significantly reduce the code size in any application. i.e, The less code we send over the wire the more performant the application will be. For example, if we just want to create a “Hello World” Application using SPA frameworks then it will take around a few MBs, but by tree shaking it can bring down the size to just a few hundred KBs. Tree shaking is implemented in Rollup and Webpack bundlers.

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  153. Is it recommended to use eval

    No, it allows arbitrary code to be run which causes a security problem. As we know that the eval() function is used to run text as code. In most of the cases, it should not be necessary to use it.

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  154. What is a Regular Expression

    A regular expression is a sequence of characters that forms a search pattern. You can use this search pattern for searching data in a text. These can be used to perform all types of text search and text replace operations. Let’s see the syntax format now,

    /pattern/modifiers;
    

    For example, the regular expression or search pattern with case-insensitive username would be,

    /John/i;
    

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  155. What are the string methods that accept Regular expression

    There are six string methods: search(), replace(), replaceAll(), match(), matchAll(), and split().

    The search() method uses an expression to search for a match, and returns the position of the match.

    var msg = "Hello John";
    var n = msg.search(/John/i); // 6
    

    The replace() and replaceAll() methods are used to return a modified string where the pattern is replaced.

    var msg = "ball bat";
    var n1 = msg.replace(/b/i, "c"); // call bat
    var n2 = msg.replaceAll(/b/i, "c"); // call cat
    

    The match() and matchAll() methods are used to return the matches when matching a string against a regular expression.

    var msg = "Hello John";
    var n1 = msg.match(/[A-Z]/g); // ["H", "J"]
    var n2 = msg.matchAll(/[A-Z]/g); // this returns an iterator
    

    The split() method is used to split a string into an array of substrings, and returns the new array.

    var msg = "Hello John";
    var n = msg.split(/\s/); // ["Hello", "John"]
    

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  156. What are modifiers in regular expression

    Modifiers can be used to perform case-insensitive and global searches. Let’s list down some of the modifiers,

    Modifier Description
    i Perform case-insensitive matching
    g Perform a global match rather than stops at first match
    m Perform multiline matching

    Let’s take an example of global modifier,

    var text = "Learn JS one by one";
    var pattern = /one/g;
    var result = text.match(pattern); // one,one
    

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  157. What are regular expression patterns

    Regular Expressions provide a group of patterns in order to match characters. Basically they are categorized into 3 types,

    1. Brackets: These are used to find a range of characters. For example, below are some use cases,
      1. [abc]: Used to find any of the characters between the brackets(a,b,c)
      2. [0-9]: Used to find any of the digits between the brackets
      3. (a|b): Used to find any of the alternatives separated with |
    2. Metacharacters: These are characters with a special meaning. For example, below are some use cases,
      1. \d: Used to find a digit
      2. \s: Used to find a whitespace character
      3. \b: Used to find a match at the beginning or ending of a word
    3. Quantifiers: These are useful to define quantities. For example, below are some use cases,
      1. n+: Used to find matches for any string that contains at least one n
      2. n*: Used to find matches for any string that contains zero or more occurrences of n
      3. n?: Used to find matches for any string that contains zero or one occurrences of n

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  158. What is a RegExp object

    RegExp object is a regular expression object with predefined properties and methods. Let’s see the simple usage of RegExp object,

    var regexp = new RegExp("\\w+");
    console.log(regexp);
    // expected output: /\w+/
    

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  159. How do you search a string for a pattern

    You can use the test() method of regular expression in order to search a string for a pattern, and return true or false depending on the result.

    var pattern = /you/;
    console.log(pattern.test("How are you?")); //true
    

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  160. What is the purpose of exec method

    The purpose of exec method is similar to test method but it executes a search for a match in a specified string and returns a result array, or null instead of returning true/false.

    var pattern = /you/;
    console.log(pattern.exec("How are you?")); //["you", index: 8, input: "How are you?", groups: undefined]
    

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  161. How do you change the style of a HTML element

    You can change inline style or classname of a HTML element using javascript

    1. Using style property: You can modify inline style using style property
    document.getElementById("title").style.fontSize = "30px";
    
    1. Using ClassName property: It is easy to modify element class using className property
    document.getElementById("title").className = "custom-title";
    

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  162. What would be the result of 1+2+‘3’

    The output is going to be 33. Since 1 and 2 are numeric values, the result of the first two digits is going to be a numeric value 3. The next digit is a string type value because of that the addition of numeric value 3 and string type value 3 is just going to be a concatenation value 33.

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  163. What is a debugger statement

    The debugger statement invokes any available debugging functionality, such as setting a breakpoint. If no debugging functionality is available, this statement has no effect. For example, in the below function a debugger statement has been inserted. So execution is paused at the debugger statement just like a breakpoint in the script source.

    function getProfile() {
      // code goes here
      debugger;
      // code goes here
    }
    

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  164. What is the purpose of breakpoints in debugging

    You can set breakpoints in the javascript code once the debugger statement is executed and the debugger window pops up. At each breakpoint, javascript will stop executing, and let you examine the JavaScript values. After examining values, you can resume the execution of code using the play button.

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  165. Can I use reserved words as identifiers

    No, you cannot use the reserved words as variables, labels, object or function names. Let’s see one simple example,

    var else = "hello"; // Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token else
    

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  166. How do you detect a mobile browser

    You can use regex which returns a true or false value depending on whether or not the user is browsing with a mobile.

    window.mobilecheck = function () {
      var mobileCheck = false;
      (function (a) {
        if (
          /(android|bb\d+|meego).+mobile|avantgo|bada\/|blackberry|blazer|compal|elaine|fennec|hiptop|iemobile|ip(hone|od)|iris|kindle|lge |maemo|midp|mmp|mobile.+firefox|netfront|opera m(ob|in)i|palm( os)?|phone|p(ixi|re)\/|plucker|pocket|psp|series(4|6)0|symbian|treo|up\.(browser|link)|vodafone|wap|windows ce|xda|xiino/i.test(
            a
          ) ||
          /1207|6310|6590|3gso|4thp|50[1-6]i|770s|802s|a wa|abac|ac(er|oo|s\-)|ai(ko|rn)|al(av|ca|co)|amoi|an(ex|ny|yw)|aptu|ar(ch|go)|as(te|us)|attw|au(di|\-m|r |s )|avan|be(ck|ll|nq)|bi(lb|rd)|bl(ac|az)|br(e|v)w|bumb|bw\-(n|u)|c55\/|capi|ccwa|cdm\-|cell|chtm|cldc|cmd\-|co(mp|nd)|craw|da(it|ll|ng)|dbte|dc\-s|devi|dica|dmob|do(c|p)o|ds(12|\-d)|el(49|ai)|em(l2|ul)|er(ic|k0)|esl8|ez([4-7]0|os|wa|ze)|fetc|fly(\-|_)|g1 u|g560|gene|gf\-5|g\-mo|go(\.w|od)|gr(ad|un)|haie|hcit|hd\-(m|p|t)|hei\-|hi(pt|ta)|hp( i|ip)|hs\-c|ht(c(\-| |_|a|g|p|s|t)|tp)|hu(aw|tc)|i\-(20|go|ma)|i230|iac( |\-|\/)|ibro|idea|ig01|ikom|im1k|inno|ipaq|iris|ja(t|v)a|jbro|jemu|jigs|kddi|keji|kgt( |\/)|klon|kpt |kwc\-|kyo(c|k)|le(no|xi)|lg( g|\/(k|l|u)|50|54|\-[a-w])|libw|lynx|m1\-w|m3ga|m50\/|ma(te|ui|xo)|mc(01|21|ca)|m\-cr|me(rc|ri)|mi(o8|oa|ts)|mmef|mo(01|02|bi|de|do|t(\-| |o|v)|zz)|mt(50|p1|v )|mwbp|mywa|n10[0-2]|n20[2-3]|n30(0|2)|n50(0|2|5)|n7(0(0|1)|10)|ne((c|m)\-|on|tf|wf|wg|wt)|nok(6|i)|nzph|o2im|op(ti|wv)|oran|owg1|p800|pan(a|d|t)|pdxg|pg(13|\-([1-8]|c))|phil|pire|pl(ay|uc)|pn\-2|po(ck|rt|se)|prox|psio|pt\-g|qa\-a|qc(07|12|21|32|60|\-[2-7]|i\-)|qtek|r380|r600|raks|rim9|ro(ve|zo)|s55\/|sa(ge|ma|mm|ms|ny|va)|sc(01|h\-|oo|p\-)|sdk\/|se(c(\-|0|1)|47|mc|nd|ri)|sgh\-|shar|sie(\-|m)|sk\-0|sl(45|id)|sm(al|ar|b3|it|t5)|so(ft|ny)|sp(01|h\-|v\-|v )|sy(01|mb)|t2(18|50)|t6(00|10|18)|ta(gt|lk)|tcl\-|tdg\-|tel(i|m)|tim\-|t\-mo|to(pl|sh)|ts(70|m\-|m3|m5)|tx\-9|up(\.b|g1|si)|utst|v400|v750|veri|vi(rg|te)|vk(40|5[0-3]|\-v)|vm40|voda|vulc|vx(52|53|60|61|70|80|81|83|85|98)|w3c(\-| )|webc|whit|wi(g |nc|nw)|wmlb|wonu|x700|yas\-|your|zeto|zte\-/i.test(
            a.substr(0, 4)
          )
        )
          mobileCheck = true;
      })(navigator.userAgent || navigator.vendor || window.opera);
      return mobileCheck;
    };
    

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  167. How do you detect a mobile browser without regexp

    You can detect mobile browsers by simply running through a list of devices and checking if the useragent matches anything. This is an alternative solution for RegExp usage,

    function detectmob() {
      if (
        navigator.userAgent.match(/Android/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/webOS/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/iPod/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/BlackBerry/i) ||
        navigator.userAgent.match(/Windows Phone/i)
      ) {
        return true;
      } else {
        return false;
      }
    }
    

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  168. How do you get the image width and height using JS

    You can programmatically get the image and check the dimensions(width and height) using Javascript.

    var img = new Image();
    img.onload = function () {
      console.log(this.width + "x" + this.height);
    };
    img.src = "http://www.google.com/intl/en_ALL/images/logo.gif";
    

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  169. How do you make synchronous HTTP request

    Browsers provide an XMLHttpRequest object which can be used to make synchronous HTTP requests from JavaScript

    function httpGet(theUrl) {
      var xmlHttpReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
      xmlHttpReq.open("GET", theUrl, false); // false for synchronous request
      xmlHttpReq.send(null);
      return xmlHttpReq.responseText;
    }
    

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  170. How do you make asynchronous HTTP request

    Browsers provide an XMLHttpRequest object which can be used to make asynchronous HTTP requests from JavaScript by passing the 3rd parameter as true.

    function httpGetAsync(theUrl, callback) {
      var xmlHttpReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
      xmlHttpReq.onreadystatechange = function () {
        if (xmlHttpReq.readyState == 4 && xmlHttpReq.status == 200)
          callback(xmlHttpReq.responseText);
      };
      xmlHttpReq.open("GET", theUrl, true); // true for asynchronous
      xmlHttpReq.send(null);
    }
    

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  171. How do you convert date to another timezone in javascript

    You can use the toLocaleString() method to convert dates in one timezone to another. For example, let’s convert current date to British English timezone as below,

    console.log(event.toLocaleString("en-GB", { timeZone: "UTC" })); //29/06/2019, 09:56:00
    

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  172. What are the properties used to get size of window

    You can use innerWidth, innerHeight, clientWidth, clientHeight properties of windows, document element and document body objects to find the size of a window. Let’s use them combination of these properties to calculate the size of a window or document,

    var width =
      window.innerWidth ||
      document.documentElement.clientWidth ||
      document.body.clientWidth;
    
    var height =
      window.innerHeight ||
      document.documentElement.clientHeight ||
      document.body.clientHeight;
    

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  173. What is a conditional operator in javascript

    The conditional (ternary) operator is the only JavaScript operator that takes three operands which acts as a shortcut for if statements.

    var isAuthenticated = false;
    console.log(
      isAuthenticated ? "Hello, welcome" : "Sorry, you are not authenticated"
    ); //Sorry, you are not authenticated
    

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  174. Can you apply chaining on conditional operator

    Yes, you can apply chaining on conditional operators similar to if … else if … else if … else chain. The syntax is going to be as below,

    function traceValue(someParam) {
      return condition1
        ? value1
        : condition2
        ? value2
        : condition3
        ? value3
        : value4;
    }
    
    // The above conditional operator is equivalent to:
    
    function traceValue(someParam) {
      if (condition1) {
        return value1;
      } else if (condition2) {
        return value2;
      } else if (condition3) {
        return value3;
      } else {
        return value4;
      }
    }
    

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  175. What are the ways to execute javascript after page load

    You can execute javascript after page load in many different ways,

    1. window.onload:
    window.onload = function ...
    
    1. document.onload:
    document.onload = function ...
    
    1. body onload:
    <body onload="script();">
    

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  176. What is the difference between proto and prototype

    The __proto__ object is the actual object that is used in the lookup chain to resolve methods, etc. Whereas prototype is the object that is used to build __proto__ when you create an object with new.

    new Employee().__proto__ === Employee.prototype;
    new Employee().prototype === undefined;
    

    There are few more differences,

    feature Prototype proto
    Access All the function constructors have prototype properties. All the objects have __proto__ property
    Purpose Used to reduce memory wastage with a single copy of function Used in lookup chain to resolve methods, constructors etc.
    ECMAScript Introduced in ES6 Introduced in ES5
    Usage Frequently used Rarely used

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  177. Can you give an example of when you really need a semicolon

    It is recommended to use semicolons after every statement in JavaScript. For example, in the below case it throws an error “.. is not a function” at runtime due to missing semicolon.

    // define a function
    var fn = (function () {
      //...
    })(
      // semicolon missing at this line
    
      // then execute some code inside a closure
      function () {
        //...
      }
    )();
    

    and it will be interpreted as

    var fn = (function () {
      //...
    })(function () {
      //...
    })();
    

    In this case, we are passing the second function as an argument to the first function and then trying to call the result of the first function call as a function. Hence, the second function will fail with a “… is not a function” error at runtime.

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  178. What is a freeze method

    The freeze() method is used to freeze an object. Freezing an object does not allow adding new properties to an object, prevents removing, and prevents changing the enumerability, configurability, or writability of existing properties. i.e. It returns the passed object and does not create a frozen copy.

    const obj = {
      prop: 100,
    };
    
    Object.freeze(obj);
    obj.prop = 200; // Throws an error in strict mode
    
    console.log(obj.prop); //100
    

    Remember freezing is only applied to the top-level properties in objects but not for nested objects. For example, let’s try to freeze user object which has employment details as nested object and observe that details have been changed.

    const user = {
      name: "John",
      employment: {
        department: "IT",
      },
    };
    
    Object.freeze(user);
    user.employment.department = "HR";
    

    Note: It causes a TypeError if the argument passed is not an object.

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  179. What is the purpose of freeze method

    Below are the main benefits of using freeze method,

    1. It is used for freezing objects and arrays.
    2. It is used to make an object immutable.

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  180. Why do I need to use freeze method

    In the Object-oriented paradigm, an existing API contains certain elements that are not intended to be extended, modified, or re-used outside of their current context. Hence it works as the final keyword which is used in various languages.

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  181. How do you detect a browser language preference

    You can use navigator object to detect a browser language preference as below,

    var language =
      (navigator.languages && navigator.languages[0]) || // Chrome / Firefox
      navigator.language || // All browsers
      navigator.userLanguage; // IE <= 10
    
    console.log(language);
    

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  182. How to convert string to title case with javascript

    Title case means that the first letter of each word is capitalized. You can convert a string to title case using the below function,

    function toTitleCase(str) {
      return str.replace(/\w\S*/g, function (txt) {
        return txt.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + txt.substring(1).toLowerCase();
      });
    }
    toTitleCase("good morning john"); // Good Morning John
    

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  183. How do you detect javascript disabled in the page

    You can use the <noscript> tag to detect javascript disabled or not. The code block inside <noscript> gets executed when JavaScript is disabled, and is typically used to display alternative content when the page generated in JavaScript.

    <script type="javascript">
        // JS related code goes here
    </script>
    <noscript>
        <a href="next_page.html?noJS=true">JavaScript is disabled in the page. Please click Next Page</a>
    </noscript>
    

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  184. What are various operators supported by javascript

    An operator is capable of manipulating(mathematical and logical computations) a certain value or operand. There are various operators supported by JavaScript as below,

    1. Arithmetic Operators: Includes + (Addition), – (Subtraction), * (Multiplication), / (Division), % (Modulus), ++ (Increment) and – – (Decrement)
    2. Comparison Operators: Includes == (Equal), != (Not Equal), === (Equal with type), > (Greater than), >= (Greater than or Equal to), < (Less than), <= (Less than or Equal to)
    3. Logical Operators: Includes && (Logical AND), || (Logical OR), ! (Logical NOT)
    4. Assignment Operators: Includes = (Assignment Operator), += (Add and Assignment Operator), –= (Subtract and Assignment Operator), *= (Multiply and Assignment), /= (Divide and Assignment), %= (Modules and Assignment)
    5. Ternary Operators: It includes conditional(: ?) Operator
    6. typeof Operator: It uses to find type of variable. The syntax looks like typeof variable

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  185. What is a rest parameter

    Rest parameter is an improved way to handle function parameters which allows us to represent an indefinite number of arguments as an array. The syntax would be as below,

    function f(a, b, ...theArgs) {
      // ...
    }
    

    For example, let’s take a sum example to calculate on dynamic number of parameters,

    function sum(...args) {
      let total = 0;
      for (const i of args) {
        total += i;
      }
      return total;
    }
    
    console.log(sum(1, 2)); //3
    console.log(sum(1, 2, 3)); //6
    console.log(sum(1, 2, 3, 4)); //10
    console.log(sum(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)); //15
    

    Note: Rest parameter is added in ES2015 or ES6

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  186. What happens if you do not use rest parameter as a last argument

    The rest parameter should be the last argument, as its job is to collect all the remaining arguments into an array. For example, if you define a function like below it doesn’t make any sense and will throw an error.

    function someFunc(a,…b,c){
    //You code goes here
    return;
    }
    

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  187. What are the bitwise operators available in javascript

    Below are the list of bitwise logical operators used in JavaScript

    1. Bitwise AND ( & )
    2. Bitwise OR ( | )
    3. Bitwise XOR ( ^ )
    4. Bitwise NOT ( ~ )
    5. Left Shift ( << )
    6. Sign Propagating Right Shift ( >> )
    7. Zero fill Right Shift ( >>> )

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  188. What is a spread operator

    Spread operator allows iterables( arrays / objects / strings ) to be expanded into single arguments/elements. Let’s take an example to see this behavior,

    function calculateSum(x, y, z) {
      return x + y + z;
    }
    
    const numbers = [1, 2, 3];
    
    console.log(calculateSum(...numbers)); // 6
    

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  189. How do you determine whether object is frozen or not

    Object.isFrozen() method is used to determine if an object is frozen or not.An object is frozen if all of the below conditions hold true,

    1. If it is not extensible.
    2. If all of its properties are non-configurable.
    3. If all its data properties are non-writable. The usage is going to be as follows,
    const object = {
      property: "Welcome JS world",
    };
    Object.freeze(object);
    console.log(Object.isFrozen(object));
    

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  190. How do you determine two values same or not using object

    The Object.is() method determines whether two values are the same value. For example, the usage with different types of values would be,

    Object.is("hello", "hello"); // true
    Object.is(window, window); // true
    Object.is([], []); // false
    

    Two values are the same if one of the following holds:

    1. both undefined
    2. both null
    3. both true or both false
    4. both strings of the same length with the same characters in the same order
    5. both the same object (means both object have same reference)
    6. both numbers and both +0 both -0 both NaN both non-zero and both not NaN and both have the same value.

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  191. What is the purpose of using object is method

    Some of the applications of Object’s is method are follows,

    1. It is used for comparison of two strings.
    2. It is used for comparison of two numbers.
    3. It is used for comparing the polarity of two numbers.
    4. It is used for comparison of two objects.

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  192. How do you copy properties from one object to other

    You can use the Object.assign() method which is used to copy the values and properties from one or more source objects to a target object. It returns the target object which has properties and values copied from the source objects. The syntax would be as below,

    Object.assign(target, ...sources);
    

    Let’s take example with one source and one target object,

    const target = { a: 1, b: 2 };
    const source = { b: 3, c: 4 };
    
    const returnedTarget = Object.assign(target, source);
    
    console.log(target); // { a: 1, b: 3, c: 4 }
    
    console.log(returnedTarget); // { a: 1, b: 3, c: 4 }
    

    As observed in the above code, there is a common property(b) from source to target so it’s value has been overwritten.

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  193. What are the applications of assign method

    Below are the some of main applications of Object.assign() method,

    1. It is used for cloning an object.
    2. It is used to merge objects with the same properties.

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  194. What is a proxy object

    The Proxy object is used to define custom behavior for fundamental operations such as property lookup, assignment, enumeration, function invocation, etc.

    A proxy is created with two parameters: a target object which you want to proxy and a handler object which contains methods to intercept fundamental operations. The syntax would be as follows,

    var p = new Proxy(target, handler);
    

    Let’s take a look at below examples of proxy object and how the get method which customize the lookup behavior,

     //Example1:
    
       const person = {
         name: 'Sudheer Jonna',
         age: 35
       };
    
     const handler = {
       get(target, prop) {
         if (prop === 'name') {
           return 'Mr. ' + target[prop];
         }
         return target[prop];
       }
     };
    
     const proxy = new Proxy(person, handler);
    
     //Example2: 
    
     var handler1 = {
       get: function (obj, prop) {
         return prop in obj ? obj[prop] : 100;
       },
     };
    
     var p = new Proxy({}, handler1);
     p.a = 10;
     p.b = null;
    
     console.log(p.a, p.b); // 10, null
     console.log("c" in p, p.c); // false, 100
    

    In the above code, it uses get handler which define the behavior of the proxy when an operation is performed on it. These proxies are mainly used for some of the below cross-cutting concerns.

    1. Logging
    2. Authentication or Authorization
    3. Data binding and observables
    4. Function parameter validation

    Note: This is a new feature in ES6.

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  195. What is the purpose of seal method

    The Object.seal() method is used to seal an object, by preventing new properties from being added to it and marking all existing properties as non-configurable. But values of present properties can still be changed as long as they are writable. Let’s see the below example to understand more about seal() method

    const object = {
      property: "Welcome JS world",
    };
    Object.seal(object);
    object.property = "Welcome to object world";
    console.log(Object.isSealed(object)); // true
    delete object.property; // You cannot delete when sealed
    console.log(object.property); //Welcome to object world
    

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  196. What are the applications of seal method

    Below are the main applications of Object.seal() method,

    1. It is used for sealing objects and arrays.
    2. It is used to make an object immutable.

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  197. What are the differences between freeze and seal methods

    If an object is frozen using the Object.freeze() method then its properties become immutable and no changes can be made in them whereas if an object is sealed using the Object.seal() method then the changes can be made in the existing properties of the object.

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  198. How do you determine if an object is sealed or not

    The Object.isSealed() method is used to determine if an object is sealed or not. An object is sealed if all of the below conditions hold true

    1. If it is not extensible.
    2. If all of its properties are non-configurable.
    3. If it is not removable (but not necessarily non-writable). Let’s see it in the action
    const object = {
      property: "Hello, Good morning",
    };
    
    Object.seal(object); // Using seal() method to seal the object
    
    console.log(Object.isSealed(object)); // checking whether the object is sealed or not
    

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  199. How do you get enumerable key and value pairs

    The Object.entries() method is used to return an array of a given object’s own enumerable string-keyed property [key, value] pairs, in the same order as that provided by a for…in loop. Let’s see the functionality of object.entries() method in an example,

    const object = {
      a: "Good morning",
      b: 100,
    };
    
    for (let [key, value] of Object.entries(object)) {
      console.log(`${key}: ${value}`); // a: 'Good morning'
      // b: 100
    }
    

    Note: The order is not guaranteed as object defined.

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  200. What is the main difference between Object.values and Object.entries method

    The Object.values() method’s behavior is similar to Object.entries() method but it returns an array of values instead [key,value] pairs.

    const object = {
      a: "Good morning",
      b: 100,
    };
    
    for (let value of Object.values(object)) {
      console.log(`${value}`); // 'Good morning \n100'
    }
    

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  201. How can you get the list of keys of any object

    You can use the Object.keys() method which is used to return an array of a given object’s own property names, in the same order as we get with a normal loop. For example, you can get the keys of a user object,

    const user = {
      name: "John",
      gender: "male",
      age: 40,
    };
    
    console.log(Object.keys(user)); //['name', 'gender', 'age']
    

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  202. How do you create an object with prototype

    The Object.create() method is used to create a new object with the specified prototype object and properties. i.e, It uses an existing object as the prototype of the newly created object. It returns a new object with the specified prototype object and properties.

    const user = {
      name: "John",
      printInfo: function () {
        console.log(`My name is ${this.name}.`);
      },
    };
    
    const admin = Object.create(user);
    
    admin.name = "Nick"; // Remember that "name" is a property set on "admin" but not on "user" object
    
    admin.printInfo(); // My name is Nick
    

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  203. What is a WeakSet

    WeakSet is used to store a collection of weakly(weak references) held objects. The syntax would be as follows,

    new WeakSet([iterable]);
    

    Let’s see the below example to explain it’s behavior,

    var ws = new WeakSet();
    var user = {};
    ws.add(user);
    ws.has(user); // true
    ws.delete(user); // removes user from the set
    ws.has(user); // false, user has been removed
    

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  204. What are the differences between WeakSet and Set

    The main difference is that references to objects in Set are strong while references to objects in WeakSet are weak. i.e, An object in WeakSet can be garbage collected if there is no other reference to it. Other differences are,

    1. Sets can store any value Whereas WeakSets can store only collections of objects
    2. WeakSet does not have size property unlike Set
    3. WeakSet does not have methods such as clear, keys, values, entries, forEach.
    4. WeakSet is not iterable.

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  205. List down the collection of methods available on WeakSet

    Below are the list of methods available on WeakSet,

    1. add(value): A new object is appended with the given value to the weakset
    2. delete(value): Deletes the value from the WeakSet collection.
    3. has(value): It returns true if the value is present in the WeakSet Collection, otherwise it returns false.

    Let’s see the functionality of all the above methods in an example,

    var weakSetObject = new WeakSet();
    var firstObject = {};
    var secondObject = {};
    // add(value)
    weakSetObject.add(firstObject);
    weakSetObject.add(secondObject);
    console.log(weakSetObject.has(firstObject)); //true
    weakSetObject.delete(secondObject);
    

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  206. What is a WeakMap

    The WeakMap object is a collection of key/value pairs in which the keys are weakly referenced. In this case, keys must be objects and the values can be arbitrary values. The syntax looks like the following:

    new WeakMap([iterable]);
    

    Let’s see the below example to explain it’s behavior,

    var ws = new WeakMap();
    var user = {};
    ws.set(user);
    ws.has(user); // true
    ws.delete(user); // removes user from the map
    ws.has(user); // false, user has been removed
    

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  207. What are the differences between WeakMap and Map

    The main difference is that references to key objects in Map are strong while references to key objects in WeakMap are weak. i.e, A key object in WeakMap can be garbage collected if there is no other reference to it. Other differences are,

    1. Maps can store any key type Whereas WeakMaps can store only collections of key objects
    2. WeakMap does not have size property unlike Map
    3. WeakMap does not have methods such as clear, keys, values, entries, forEach.
    4. WeakMap is not iterable.

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  208. List down the collection of methods available on WeakMap

    Below are the list of methods available on WeakMap,

    1. set(key, value): Sets the value for the key in the WeakMap object. Returns the WeakMap object.
    2. delete(key): Removes any value associated to the key.
    3. has(key): Returns a Boolean asserting whether a value has been associated to the key in the WeakMap object or not.
    4. get(key): Returns the value associated to the key, or undefined if there is none. Let’s see the functionality of all the above methods in an example,
    var weakMapObject = new WeakMap();
    var firstObject = {};
    var secondObject = {};
    // set(key, value)
    weakMapObject.set(firstObject, "John");
    weakMapObject.set(secondObject, 100);
    console.log(weakMapObject.has(firstObject)); //true
    console.log(weakMapObject.get(firstObject)); // John
    weakMapObject.delete(secondObject);
    

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  209. What is the purpose of uneval

    The uneval() is an inbuilt function which is used to create a string representation of the source code of an Object. It is a top-level function and is not associated with any object. Let’s see the below example to know more about it’s functionality,

    var a = 1;
    uneval(a); // returns a String containing 1
    uneval(function user() {}); // returns "(function user(){})"
    

    The uneval() function has been deprecated. It is recommended to use toString() for functions and JSON.toStringify() for other cases.

    function user() {}
    console.log(user.toString()); // returns "(function user(){})"
    

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  210. How do you encode an URL

    The encodeURI() function is used to encode complete URI which has special characters except (, / ? : @ & = + $ #) characters.

    var uri = "https://mozilla.org/?x=шеллы";
    var encoded = encodeURI(uri);
    console.log(encoded); // https://mozilla.org/?x=%D1%88%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%BB%D1%8B
    

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  211. How do you decode an URL

    The decodeURI() function is used to decode a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) previously created by encodeURI().

    var uri = "https://mozilla.org/?x=шеллы";
    var encoded = encodeURI(uri);
    console.log(encoded); // https://mozilla.org/?x=%D1%88%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%BB%D1%8B
    try {
      console.log(decodeURI(encoded)); // "https://mozilla.org/?x=шеллы"
    } catch (e) {
      // catches a malformed URI
      console.error(e);
    }
    

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  212. How do you print the contents of web page

    The window object provided a print() method which is used to print the contents of the current window. It opens a Print dialog box which lets you choose between various printing options. Let’s see the usage of print method in an example,

    <input type="button" value="Print" onclick="window.print()" />
    

    Note: In most browsers, it will block while the print dialog is open.

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  213. What is the difference between uneval and eval

    The uneval function returns the source of a given object; whereas the eval function does the opposite, by evaluating that source code in a different memory area. Let’s see an example to clarify the difference,

    var msg = uneval(function greeting() {
      return "Hello, Good morning";
    });
    var greeting = eval(msg);
    greeting(); // returns "Hello, Good morning"
    

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  214. What is an anonymous function

    An anonymous function is a function without a name! Anonymous functions are commonly assigned to a variable name or used as a callback function. The syntax would be as below,

    function (optionalParameters) {
      //do something
    }
    
    const myFunction = function(){ //Anonymous function assigned to a variable
      //do something
    };
    
    [1, 2, 3].map(function(element){ //Anonymous function used as a callback function
      //do something
    });
    

    Let’s see the above anonymous function in an example,

    var x = function (a, b) {
      return a * b;
    };
    var z = x(5, 10);
    console.log(z); // 50
    

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  215. What is the precedence order between local and global variables

    A local variable takes precedence over a global variable with the same name. Let’s see this behavior in an example.

    var msg = "Good morning";
    function greeting() {
      msg = "Good Evening";
      console.log(msg); // Good Evening
    }
    greeting();
    

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  216. What are javascript accessors

    ECMAScript 5 introduced javascript object accessors or computed properties through getters and setters. Getters uses the get keyword whereas Setters uses the set keyword.

    var user = {
      firstName: "John",
      lastName: "Abraham",
      language: "en",
      get lang() {
        return this.language;
      },
      set lang(lang) {
        this.language = lang;
      },
    };
    console.log(user.lang); // getter access lang as en
    user.lang = "fr";
    console.log(user.lang); // setter used to set lang as fr
    

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  217. How do you define property on Object constructor

    The Object.defineProperty() static method is used to define a new property directly on an object, or modify an existing property on an object, and returns the object. Let’s see an example to know how to define property,

    const newObject = {};
    
    Object.defineProperty(newObject, "newProperty", {
      value: 100,
      writable: false,
    });
    
    console.log(newObject.newProperty); // 100
    
    newObject.newProperty = 200; // It throws an error in strict mode due to writable setting
    

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  218. What is the difference between get and defineProperty

    Both have similar results unless you use classes. If you use get the property will be defined on the prototype of the object whereas using Object.defineProperty() the property will be defined on the instance it is applied to.

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  219. What are the advantages of Getters and Setters

    Below are the list of benefits of Getters and Setters,

    1. They provide simpler syntax
    2. They are used for defining computed properties, or accessors in JS.
    3. Useful to provide equivalence relation between properties and methods
    4. They can provide better data quality
    5. Useful for doing things behind the scenes with the encapsulated logic.

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  220. Can I add getters and setters using defineProperty method

    Yes, You can use the Object.defineProperty() method to add Getters and Setters. For example, the below counter object uses increment, decrement, add and subtract properties,

    var obj = { counter: 0 };
    
    // Define getters
    Object.defineProperty(obj, "increment", {
      get: function () {
        this.counter++;
        return this.counter;
      },
    });
    Object.defineProperty(obj, "decrement", {
      get: function () {
        this.counter--;
        return this.counter;
      },
    });
    
    // Define setters
    Object.defineProperty(obj, "add", {
      set: function (value) {
        this.counter += value;
      },
    });
    Object.defineProperty(obj, "subtract", {
      set: function (value) {
        this.counter -= value;
      },
    });
    
    obj.add = 10;
    obj.subtract = 5;
    console.log(obj.increment); //6
    console.log(obj.decrement); //5
    

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  221. What is the purpose of switch-case

    The switch case statement in JavaScript is used for decision making purposes. In a few cases, using the switch case statement is going to be more convenient than if-else statements. The syntax would be as below,

    switch (expression)
    {
        case value1:
            statement1;
            break;
        case value2:
            statement2;
            break;
        .
        .
        case valueN:
            statementN;
            break;
        default:
            statementDefault;
    }
    

    The above multi-way branch statement provides an easy way to dispatch execution to different parts of code based on the value of the expression.

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  222. What are the conventions to be followed for the usage of switch case

    Below are the list of conventions should be taken care,

    1. The expression can be of type either number or string.
    2. Duplicate values are not allowed for the expression.
    3. The default statement is optional. If the expression passed to switch does not match with any case value then the statement within default case will be executed.
    4. The break statement is used inside the switch to terminate a statement sequence.
    5. The break statement is optional. But if it is omitted, the execution will continue on into the next case.

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  223. What are primitive data types

    A primitive data type is data that has a primitive value (which has no properties or methods). There are 7 types of primitive data types.

    1. string
    2. number
    3. boolean
    4. null
    5. undefined
    6. bigint
    7. symbol

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  224. What are the different ways to access object properties

    There are 3 possible ways for accessing the property of an object.

    1. Dot notation: It uses dot for accessing the properties
    objectName.property;
    
    1. Square brackets notation: It uses square brackets for property access
    objectName["property"];
    
    1. Expression notation: It uses expression in the square brackets
    objectName[expression];
    

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  225. What are the function parameter rules

    JavaScript functions follow below rules for parameters,

    1. The function definitions do not specify data types for parameters.
    2. Do not perform type checking on the passed arguments.
    3. Do not check the number of arguments received. i.e, The below function follows the above rules,
    function functionName(parameter1, parameter2, parameter3) {
      console.log(parameter1); // 1
    }
    functionName(1);
    

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  226. What is an error object

    An error object is a built in error object that provides error information when an error occurs. It has two properties: name and message. For example, the below function logs error details,

    try {
      greeting("Welcome");
    } catch (err) {
      console.log(err.name + "<br>" + err.message);
    }
    

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  227. When you get a syntax error

    A SyntaxError is thrown if you try to evaluate code with a syntax error. For example, the below missing quote for the function parameter throws a syntax error

    try {
      eval("greeting('welcome)"); // Missing ' will produce an error
    } catch (err) {
      console.log(err.name);
    }
    

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  228. What are the different error names from error object

    There are 7 different types of error names returned from error object, | Error Name | Description | |—- | ——— | AggregateError | An error indicating that multiple errors occurred | | EvalError | An error has occurred in the eval() function | | RangeError | An error has occurred with a number “out of range” | | ReferenceError | An error due to an illegal reference| | SyntaxError | An error due to a syntax error| | TypeError | An error due to a type error | | URIError | An error due to encodeURI() |

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  229. What are the various statements in error handling

    Below are the list of statements used in an error handling,

    1. try: This statement is used to test a block of code for errors
    2. catch: This statement is used to handle the error
    3. throw: This statement is used to create custom errors.
    4. finally: This statement is used to execute code after try and catch regardless of the result.

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  230. What are the two types of loops in javascript

    1. Entry Controlled loops: In this kind of loop type, the test condition is tested before entering the loop body. For example, For Loop and While Loop comes under this category.
    2. Exit Controlled Loops: In this kind of loop type, the test condition is tested or evaluated at the end of the loop body. i.e, the loop body will execute at least once irrespective of test condition true or false. For example, do-while loop comes under this category.

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  231. What is nodejs

    Node.js is a server-side platform built on Chrome’s JavaScript runtime for easily building fast and scalable network applications. It is an event-based, non-blocking, asynchronous I/O runtime that uses Google’s V8 JavaScript engine and libuv library.

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  232. What is an Intl object

    The Intl object is the namespace for the ECMAScript Internationalization API, which provides language sensitive string comparison, number formatting, and date and time formatting. It provides access to several constructors and language sensitive functions.

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  233. How do you perform language specific date and time formatting

    You can use the Intl.DateTimeFormat object which is a constructor for objects that enable language-sensitive date and time formatting. Let’s see this behavior with an example,

    var date = new Date(Date.UTC(2019, 07, 07, 3, 0, 0));
    console.log(new Intl.DateTimeFormat("en-GB").format(date)); // 07/08/2019
    console.log(new Intl.DateTimeFormat("en-AU").format(date)); // 07/08/2019
    

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  234. What is an Iterator

    An iterator is an object which defines a sequence and a return value upon its termination. It implements the Iterator protocol with a next() method which returns an object with two properties: value (the next value in the sequence) and done (which is true if the last value in the sequence has been consumed).

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  235. How does synchronous iteration works

    Synchronous iteration was introduced in ES6 and it works with below set of components,

    Iterable: It is an object which can be iterated over via a method whose key is Symbol.iterator.

    Iterator: It is an object returned by invoking [Symbol.iterator]() on an iterable. This iterator object wraps each iterated element in an object and returns it via next() method one by one.

    IteratorResult: It is an object returned by next() method. The object contains two properties; the value property contains an iterated element and the done property determines whether the element is the last element or not.

    Let’s demonstrate synchronous iteration with an array as below,

    const iterable = ["one", "two", "three"];
    const iterator = iterable[Symbol.iterator]();
    console.log(iterator.next()); // { value: 'one', done: false }
    console.log(iterator.next()); // { value: 'two', done: false }
    console.log(iterator.next()); // { value: 'three', done: false }
    console.log(iterator.next()); // { value: 'undefined, done: true }
    

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  236. What is an event loop

    The event loop is a process that continuously monitors both the call stack and the event queue and checks whether or not the call stack is empty. If the call stack is empty and there are pending events in the event queue, the event loop dequeues the event from the event queue and pushes it to the call stack. The call stack executes the event, and any additional events generated during the execution are added to the end of the event queue.

    Note: The event loop allows Node.js to perform non-blocking I/O operations, even though JavaScript is single-threaded, by offloading operations to the system kernel whenever possible. Since most modern kernels are multi-threaded, they can handle multiple operations executing in the background.

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  237. What is call stack

    Call Stack is a data structure for javascript interpreters to keep track of function calls(creates execution context) in the program. It has two major actions,

    1. Whenever you call a function for its execution, you are pushing it to the stack.
    2. Whenever the execution is completed, the function is popped out of the stack.

    Let’s take an example and it’s state representation in a diagram format

    function hungry() {
      eatFruits();
    }
    function eatFruits() {
      return "I'm eating fruits";
    }
    
    // Invoke the `hungry` function
    hungry();
    

    The above code processed in a call stack as below,

    1. Add the hungry() function to the call stack list and execute the code.
    2. Add the eatFruits() function to the call stack list and execute the code.
    3. Delete the eatFruits() function from our call stack list.
    4. Delete the hungry() function from the call stack list since there are no items anymore.

    Screenshot

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  238. What is an event queue

    The event queue follows the queue data structure. It stores async callbacks to be added to the call stack. It is also known as the Callback Queue or Macrotask Queue.

    Whenever the call stack receives an async function, it is moved into the Web API. Based on the function, Web API executes it and awaits the result. Once it is finished, it moves the callback into the event queue (the callback of the promise is moved into the microtask queue).

    The event loop constantly checks whether or not the call stack is empty. Once the call stack is empty and there is a callback in the event queue, the event loop moves the callback into the call stack. But if there is a callback in the microtask queue as well, it is moved first. The microtask queue has a higher priority than the event queue.

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  239. What is a decorator

    A decorator is an expression that evaluates to a function and that takes the target, name, and decorator descriptor as arguments. Also, it optionally returns a decorator descriptor to install on the target object. Let’s define admin decorator for user class at design time,

    function admin(isAdmin) {
       return function(target) {
           target.isAdmin = isAdmin;
       }
    }
    
    @admin(true)
    class User() {
    }
    console.log(User.isAdmin); //true
    
     @admin(false)
     class User() {
     }
     console.log(User.isAdmin); //false
    

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  240. What are the properties of Intl object

    Below are the list of properties available on Intl object,

    1. Collator: These are the objects that enable language-sensitive string comparison.
    2. DateTimeFormat: These are the objects that enable language-sensitive date and time formatting.
    3. ListFormat: These are the objects that enable language-sensitive list formatting.
    4. NumberFormat: Objects that enable language-sensitive number formatting.
    5. PluralRules: Objects that enable plural-sensitive formatting and language-specific rules for plurals.
    6. RelativeTimeFormat: Objects that enable language-sensitive relative time formatting.

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  241. What is an Unary operator

    The unary(+) operator is used to convert a variable to a number.If the variable cannot be converted, it will still become a number but with the value NaN. Let’s see this behavior in an action.

    var x = "100";
    var y = +x;
    console.log(typeof x, typeof y); // string, number
    
    var a = "Hello";
    var b = +a;
    console.log(typeof a, typeof b, b); // string, number, NaN
    

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  242. How do you sort elements in an array

    The sort() method is used to sort the elements of an array in place and returns the sorted array. The default sort order is ascending, based on the string Unicode order. The example usage would be as below,

    var months = ["Aug", "Sep", "Jan", "June"];
    months.sort();
    console.log(months); //  ["Aug", "Jan", "June", "Sep"]
    

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  243. What is the purpose of compareFunction while sorting arrays

    The compareFunction is used to define the sort order. If omitted, the array elements are converted to strings, then sorted according to each character’s Unicode code point value.

    Let’s take an example to see the usage of compareFunction,

    let numbers = [1, 2, 5, 3, 4];
    numbers.sort((a, b) => b - a);
    console.log(numbers); // [5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    

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  244. How do you reversing an array

    You can use the reverse() method to reverse the elements in an array. This method is useful to sort an array in descending order. Let’s see the usage of reverse() method in an example,

    let numbers = [1, 2, 5, 3, 4];
    numbers.sort((a, b) => b - a);
    numbers.reverse();
    console.log(numbers); // [1, 2, 3, 4 ,5]
    

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  245. How do you find min and max value in an array

    You can use Math.min and Math.max methods on array variables to find the minimum and maximum elements within an array. Let’s create two functions to find the min and max value with in an array,

    var marks = [50, 20, 70, 60, 45, 30];
    function findMin(arr) {
      return Math.min.apply(null, arr);
    }
    function findMax(arr) {
      return Math.max.apply(null, arr);
    }
    
    console.log(findMin(marks));
    console.log(findMax(marks));
    

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  246. How do you find min and max values without Math functions

    You can write functions which loop through an array comparing each value with the lowest value or highest value to find the min and max values. Let’s create those functions to find min and max values,

    var marks = [50, 20, 70, 60, 45, 30];
    function findMin(arr) {
      var length = arr.length;
      var min = Infinity;
      while (length--) {
        if (arr[length] < min) {
          min = arr[length];
        }
      }
      return min;
    }
    
    function findMax(arr) {
      var length = arr.length;
      var max = -Infinity;
      while (length--) {
        if (arr[length] > max) {
          max = arr[length];
        }
      }
      return max;
    }
    
    console.log(findMin(marks));
    console.log(findMax(marks));
    

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  247. What is an empty statement and purpose of it

    The empty statement is a semicolon (;) indicating that no statement will be executed, even if JavaScript syntax requires one. Since there is no action with an empty statement you might think that it’s usage is quite less, but the empty statement is occasionally useful when you want to create a loop that has an empty body. For example, you can initialize an array with zero values as below,

    // Initialize an array a
    for (let i = 0; i < a.length; a[i++] = 0);
    

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  248. How do you get metadata of a module

    You can use the import.meta object which is a meta-property exposing context-specific meta data to a JavaScript module. It contains information about the current module, such as the module’s URL. In browsers, you might get different meta data than NodeJS.

    <script type="module" src="welcome-module.js"></script>;
    console.log(import.meta); // { url: "file:///home/user/welcome-module.js" }
    

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  249. What is a comma operator

    The comma operator is used to evaluate each of its operands from left to right and returns the value of the last operand. This is totally different from comma usage within arrays, objects, and function arguments and parameters. For example, the usage for numeric expressions would be as below,

    var x = 1;
    x = (x++, x);
    
    console.log(x); // 2
    

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  250. What is the advantage of a comma operator

    It is normally used to include multiple expressions in a location that requires a single expression. One of the common usages of this comma operator is to supply multiple parameters in a for loop. For example, the below for loop uses multiple expressions in a single location using comma operator,

    for (var a = 0, b =10; a <= 10; a++, b--)
    

    You can also use the comma operator in a return statement where it processes before returning.

    function myFunction() {
      var a = 1;
      return (a += 10), a; // 11
    }
    

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  251. What is typescript

    TypeScript is a typed superset of JavaScript created by Microsoft that adds optional types, classes, async/await, and many other features, and compiles to plain JavaScript. Angular is built entirely in TypeScript and is used as the primary language. You can install it globally as

    npm install -g typescript
    

    Let’s see a simple example of TypeScript usage,

    function greeting(name: string): string {
      return "Hello, " + name;
    }
    
    let user = "Sudheer";
    
    console.log(greeting(user));
    

    The greeting method allows only string type as argument.

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  252. What are the differences between javascript and typescript

    Below are the list of differences between javascript and typescript,

    feature typescript javascript
    Language paradigm Object oriented programming language Scripting language
    Typing support Supports static typing It has dynamic typing
    Modules Supported Not supported
    Interface It has interfaces concept Doesn’t support interfaces
    Optional parameters Functions support optional parameters No support of optional parameters for functions

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  253. What are the advantages of typescript over javascript

    Below are some of the advantages of typescript over javascript,

    1. TypeScript is able to find compile time errors at the development time only and it makes sures less runtime errors. Whereas javascript is an interpreted language.
    2. TypeScript is strongly-typed or supports static typing which allows for checking type correctness at compile time. This is not available in javascript.
    3. TypeScript compiler can compile the .ts files into ES3,ES4 and ES5 unlike ES6 features of javascript which may not be supported in some browsers.

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  254. What is an object initializer

    An object initializer is an expression that describes the initialization of an Object. The syntax for this expression is represented as a comma-delimited list of zero or more pairs of property names and associated values of an object, enclosed in curly braces ({}). This is also known as literal notation. It is one of the ways to create an object.

    var initObject = { a: "John", b: 50, c: {} };
    
    console.log(initObject.a); // John
    

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  255. What is a constructor method

    The constructor method is a special method for creating and initializing an object created within a class. If you do not specify a constructor method, a default constructor is used. The example usage of constructor would be as below,

    class Employee {
      constructor() {
        this.name = "John";
      }
    }
    
    var employeeObject = new Employee();
    
    console.log(employeeObject.name); // John
    

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  256. What happens if you write constructor more than once in a class

    The “constructor” in a class is a special method and it should be defined only once in a class. i.e, If you write a constructor method more than once in a class it will throw a SyntaxError error.

     class Employee {
       constructor() {
         this.name = "John";
       }
       constructor() {   //  Uncaught SyntaxError: A class may only have one constructor
         this.age = 30;
       }
     }
    
     var employeeObject = new Employee();
    
     console.log(employeeObject.name);
    

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  257. How do you call the constructor of a parent class

    You can use the super keyword to call the constructor of a parent class. Remember that super() must be called before using ‘this’ reference. Otherwise it will cause a reference error. Let’s the usage of it,

    class Square extends Rectangle {
      constructor(length) {
        super(length, length);
        this.name = "Square";
      }
    
      get area() {
        return this.width * this.height;
      }
    
      set area(value) {
        this.area = value;
      }
    }
    

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  258. How do you get the prototype of an object

    You can use the Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) method to return the prototype of the specified object. i.e. The value of the internal prototype property. If there are no inherited properties then null value is returned.

    const newPrototype = {};
    const newObject = Object.create(newPrototype);
    
    console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(newObject) === newPrototype); // true
    

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  259. What happens If I pass string type for getPrototype method

    In ES5, it will throw a TypeError exception if the obj parameter isn’t an object. Whereas in ES2015, the parameter will be coerced to an Object.

    // ES5
    Object.getPrototypeOf("James"); // TypeError: "James" is not an object
    // ES2015
    Object.getPrototypeOf("James"); // String.prototype
    

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  260. How do you set prototype of one object to another

    You can use the Object.setPrototypeOf() method that sets the prototype (i.e., the internal Prototype property) of a specified object to another object or null. For example, if you want to set prototype of a square object to rectangle object would be as follows,

    Object.setPrototypeOf(Square.prototype, Rectangle.prototype);
    Object.setPrototypeOf({}, null);
    

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  261. How do you check whether an object can be extendable or not

    The Object.isExtensible() method is used to determine if an object is extendable or not. i.e, Whether it can have new properties added to it or not.

    const newObject = {};
    console.log(Object.isExtensible(newObject)); //true
    

    Note: By default, all the objects are extendable. i.e, The new properties can be added or modified.

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  262. How do you prevent an object to extend

    The Object.preventExtensions() method is used to prevent new properties from ever being added to an object. In other words, it prevents future extensions to the object. Let’s see the usage of this property,

    const newObject = {};
    Object.preventExtensions(newObject); // NOT extendable
    
    try {
      Object.defineProperty(newObject, "newProperty", {
        // Adding new property
        value: 100,
      });
    } catch (e) {
      console.log(e); // TypeError: Cannot define property newProperty, object is not extensible
    }
    

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  263. What are the different ways to make an object non-extensible

    You can mark an object non-extensible in 3 ways,

    1. Object.preventExtensions
    2. Object.seal
    3. Object.freeze
    var newObject = {};
    
    Object.preventExtensions(newObject); // Prevent objects are non-extensible
    Object.isExtensible(newObject); // false
    
    var sealedObject = Object.seal({}); // Sealed objects are non-extensible
    Object.isExtensible(sealedObject); // false
    
    var frozenObject = Object.freeze({}); // Frozen objects are non-extensible
    Object.isExtensible(frozenObject); // false
    

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  264. How do you define multiple properties on an object

    The Object.defineProperties() method is used to define new or modify existing properties directly on an object and returning the object. Let’s define multiple properties on an empty object,

    const newObject = {};
    
    Object.defineProperties(newObject, {
      newProperty1: {
        value: "John",
        writable: true,
      },
      newProperty2: {},
    });
    

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  265. What is MEAN in javascript

    The MEAN (MongoDB, Express, AngularJS, and Node.js) stack is the most popular open-source JavaScript software tech stack available for building dynamic web apps where you can write both the server-side and client-side halves of the web project entirely in JavaScript.

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  266. What Is Obfuscation in javascript

    Obfuscation is the deliberate act of creating obfuscated javascript code(i.e, source or machine code) that is difficult for humans to understand. It is something similar to encryption, but a machine can understand the code and execute it. Let’s see the below function before Obfuscation,

    function greeting() {
      console.log("Hello, welcome to JS world");
    }
    

    And after the code Obfuscation, it would be appeared as below,

    eval(
      (function (p, a, c, k, e, d) {
        e = function (c) {
          return c;
        };
        if (!"".replace(/^/, String)) {
          while (c--) {
            d[c] = k[c] || c;
          }
          k = [
            function (e) {
              return d[e];
            },
          ];
          e = function () {
            return "\\w+";
          };
          c = 1;
        }
        while (c--) {
          if (k[c]) {
            p = p.replace(new RegExp("\\b" + e(c) + "\\b", "g"), k[c]);
          }
        }
        return p;
      })(
        "2 1(){0.3('4, 7 6 5 8')}",
        9,
        9,
        "console|greeting|function|log|Hello|JS|to|welcome|world".split("|"),
        0,
        {}
      )
    );
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  267. Why do you need Obfuscation

    Below are the few reasons for Obfuscation,

    1. The Code size will be reduced. So data transfers between server and client will be fast.
    2. It hides the business logic from outside world and protects the code from others
    3. Reverse engineering is highly difficult
    4. The download time will be reduced

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  268. What is Minification

    Minification is the process of removing all unnecessary characters(empty spaces are removed) and variables will be renamed without changing it’s functionality. It is also a type of obfuscation .

    ⬆ Back to Top

  269. What are the advantages of minification

    Normally it is recommended to use minification for heavy traffic and intensive requirements of resources. It reduces file sizes with below benefits,

    1. Decreases loading times of a web page
    2. Saves bandwidth usages

    ⬆ Back to Top

  270. What are the differences between Obfuscation and Encryption

    Below are the main differences between Obfuscation and Encryption,

    Feature Obfuscation Encryption
    Definition Changing the form of any data in any other form Changing the form of information to an unreadable format by using a key
    A key to decode It can be decoded without any key It is required
    Target data format It will be converted to a complex form Converted into an unreadable format

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  271. What are the common tools used for minification

    There are many online/offline tools to minify the javascript files,

    1. Google’s Closure Compiler
    2. UglifyJS2
    3. jsmin
    4. javascript-minifier.com/
    5. prettydiff.com

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  272. How do you perform form validation using javascript

    JavaScript can be used to perform HTML form validation. For example, if the form field is empty, the function needs to notify, and return false, to prevent the form being submitted. Lets’ perform user login in an html form,

    <form name="myForm" onsubmit="return validateForm()" method="post">
      User name: <input type="text" name="uname" />
      <input type="submit" value="Submit" />
    </form>
    

    And the validation on user login is below,

    function validateForm() {
      var x = document.forms["myForm"]["uname"].value;
      if (x == "") {
        alert("The username shouldn't be empty");
        return false;
      }
    }
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  273. How do you perform form validation without javascript

    You can perform HTML form validation automatically without using javascript. The validation enabled by applying the required attribute to prevent form submission when the input is empty.

    <form method="post">
      <input type="text" name="uname" required />
      <input type="submit" value="Submit" />
    </form>
    

    Note: Automatic form validation does not work in Internet Explorer 9 or earlier.

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  274. What are the DOM methods available for constraint validation

    The below DOM methods are available for constraint validation on an invalid input,

    1. checkValidity(): It returns true if an input element contains valid data.
    2. setCustomValidity(): It is used to set the validationMessage property of an input element. Let’s take an user login form with DOM validations
    function myFunction() {
      var userName = document.getElementById("uname");
      if (!userName.checkValidity()) {
        document.getElementById("message").innerHTML =
          userName.validationMessage;
      } else {
        document.getElementById("message").innerHTML =
          "Entered a valid username";
      }
    }
    

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  275. What are the available constraint validation DOM properties

    Below are the list of some of the constraint validation DOM properties available,

    1. validity: It provides a list of boolean properties related to the validity of an input element.
    2. validationMessage: It displays the message when the validity is false.
    3. willValidate: It indicates if an input element will be validated or not.

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  276. What are the list of validity properties

    The validity property of an input element provides a set of properties related to the validity of data.

    1. customError: It returns true, if a custom validity message is set.
    2. patternMismatch: It returns true, if an element’s value does not match its pattern attribute.
    3. rangeOverflow: It returns true, if an element’s value is greater than its max attribute.
    4. rangeUnderflow: It returns true, if an element’s value is less than its min attribute.
    5. stepMismatch: It returns true, if an element’s value is invalid according to step attribute.
    6. tooLong: It returns true, if an element’s value exceeds its maxLength attribute.
    7. typeMismatch: It returns true, if an element’s value is invalid according to type attribute.
    8. valueMissing: It returns true, if an element with a required attribute has no value.
    9. valid: It returns true, if an element’s value is valid.

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  277. Give an example usage of rangeOverflow property

    If an element’s value is greater than its max attribute then rangeOverflow property returns true. For example, the below form submission throws an error if the value is more than 100,

    <input id="age" type="number" max="100" />
    <button onclick="myOverflowFunction()">OK</button>
    
    function myOverflowFunction() {
      if (document.getElementById("age").validity.rangeOverflow) {
        alert("The mentioned age is not allowed");
      }
    }
    

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  278. Is enums feature available in javascript

    No, javascript does not natively support enums. But there are different kinds of solutions to simulate them even though they may not provide exact equivalents. For example, you can use freeze or seal on object,

    var DaysEnum = Object.freeze({"monday":1, "tuesday":2, "wednesday":3, ...})
    

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  279. What is an enum

    An enum is a type restricting variables to one value from a predefined set of constants. JavaScript has no enums but typescript provides built-in enum support.

    enum Color {
     RED, GREEN, BLUE
    }
    

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  280. How do you list all properties of an object

    You can use the Object.getOwnPropertyNames() method which returns an array of all properties found directly in a given object. Let’s see the usage of this in an example below:

    const newObject = {
      a: 1,
      b: 2,
      c: 3,
    };
    
    console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(newObject));
    ["a", "b", "c"];
    

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  281. How do you get property descriptors of an object

    You can use the Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors() method which returns all own property descriptors of a given object. The example usage of this method is below,

    const newObject = {
      a: 1,
      b: 2,
      c: 3,
    };
    const descriptorsObject = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors(newObject);
    console.log(descriptorsObject.a.writable); //true
    console.log(descriptorsObject.a.configurable); //true
    console.log(descriptorsObject.a.enumerable); //true
    console.log(descriptorsObject.a.value); // 1
    

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  282. What are the attributes provided by a property descriptor

    A property descriptor is a record which has the following attributes

    1. value: The value associated with the property
    2. writable: Determines whether the value associated with the property can be changed or not
    3. configurable: Returns true if the type of this property descriptor can be changed and if the property can be deleted from the corresponding object.
    4. enumerable: Determines whether the property appears during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object or not.
    5. set: A function which serves as a setter for the property
    6. get: A function which serves as a getter for the property

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  283. How do you extend classes

    The extends keyword is used in class declarations/expressions to create a class which is a child of another class. It can be used to subclass custom classes as well as built-in objects. The syntax would be as below,

    class ChildClass extends ParentClass { ... }
    

    Let’s take an example of Square subclass from Polygon parent class,

    class Square extends Rectangle {
      constructor(length) {
        super(length, length);
        this.name = "Square";
      }
    
      get area() {
        return this.width * this.height;
      }
    
      set area(value) {
        this.area = value;
      }
    }
    

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  284. How do I modify the url without reloading the page

    The window.location.href property will be helpful to modify the url but it reloads the page. HTML5 introduced the history.pushState() and history.replaceState() methods, which allow you to add and modify history entries, respectively. For example, you can use pushState as below,

    window.history.pushState("page2", "Title", "/page2.html");
    

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  285. How do you check whether an array includes a particular value or not

    The Array#includes() method is used to determine whether an array includes a particular value among its entries by returning either true or false. Let’s see an example to find an element(numeric and string) within an array.

    var numericArray = [1, 2, 3, 4];
    console.log(numericArray.includes(3)); // true
    
    var stringArray = ["green", "yellow", "blue"];
    console.log(stringArray.includes("blue")); //true
    

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  286. How do you compare scalar arrays

    You can use length and every method of arrays to compare two scalar(compared directly using ===) arrays. The combination of these expressions can give the expected result,

    const arrayFirst = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    const arraySecond = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    console.log(
      arrayFirst.length === arraySecond.length &&
        arrayFirst.every((value, index) => value === arraySecond[index])
    ); // true
    

    If you would like to compare arrays irrespective of order then you should sort them before,

    const arrayFirst = [2, 3, 1, 4, 5];
    const arraySecond = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    console.log(
      arrayFirst.length === arraySecond.length &&
        arrayFirst.sort().every((value, index) => value === arraySecond[index])
    ); //true
    

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  287. How to get the value from get parameters

    The new URL() object accepts the url string and searchParams property of this object can be used to access the get parameters. Remember that you may need to use polyfill or window.location to access the URL in older browsers(including IE).

    let urlString = "http://www.some-domain.com/about.html?x=1&y=2&z=3"; //window.location.href
    let url = new URL(urlString);
    let parameterZ = url.searchParams.get("z");
    console.log(parameterZ); // 3
    

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  288. How do you print numbers with commas as thousand separators

    You can use the Number.prototype.toLocaleString() method which returns a string with a language-sensitive representation such as thousand separator,currency etc of this number.

    function convertToThousandFormat(x) {
      return x.toLocaleString(); // 12,345.679
    }
    
    console.log(convertToThousandFormat(12345.6789));
    

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  289. What is the difference between java and javascript

    Both are totally unrelated programming languages and no relation between them. Java is statically typed, compiled, runs on its own VM. Whereas Javascript is dynamically typed, interpreted, and runs in a browser and nodejs environments. Let’s see the major differences in a tabular format, | Feature | Java | JavaScript | |—- | —- | —– | Typed | It’s a strongly typed language | It’s a dynamic typed language | | Paradigm | Object oriented programming | Prototype based programming | | Scoping | Block scoped | Function-scoped | | Concurrency | Thread based | event based | | Memory | Uses more memory | Uses less memory. Hence it will be used for web pages |

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  290. Does JavaScript supports namespace

    JavaScript doesn’t support namespace by default. So if you create any element(function, method, object, variable) then it becomes global and pollutes the global namespace. Let’s take an example of defining two functions without any namespace,

    function func1() {
      console.log("This is a first definition");
    }
    function func1() {
      console.log("This is a second definition");
    }
    func1(); // This is a second definition
    

    It always calls the second function definition. In this case, namespace will solve the name collision problem.

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  291. How do you declare namespace

    Even though JavaScript lacks namespaces, we can use Objects , IIFE to create namespaces.

    1. Using Object Literal Notation: Let’s wrap variables and functions inside an Object literal which acts as a namespace. After that you can access them using object notation

      var namespaceOne = {
          function func1() {
              console.log("This is a first definition");
          }
      }
      var namespaceTwo = {
            function func1() {
                console.log("This is a second definition");
            }
        }
      namespaceOne.func1(); // This is a first definition
      namespaceTwo.func1(); // This is a second definition
      
    2. Using IIFE (Immediately invoked function expression): The outer pair of parentheses of IIFE creates a local scope for all the code inside of it and makes the anonymous function a function expression. Due to that, you can create the same function in two different function expressions to act as a namespace.

      (function () {
        function fun1() {
          console.log("This is a first definition");
        }
        fun1();
      })();
      
      (function () {
        function fun1() {
          console.log("This is a second definition");
        }
        fun1();
      })();
      
    3. Using a block and a let/const declaration: In ECMAScript 6, you can simply use a block and a let declaration to restrict the scope of a variable to a block.

      {
        let myFunction = function fun1() {
          console.log("This is a first definition");
        };
        myFunction();
      }
      //myFunction(): ReferenceError: myFunction is not defined.
      
      {
        let myFunction = function fun1() {
          console.log("This is a second definition");
        };
        myFunction();
      }
      //myFunction(): ReferenceError: myFunction is not defined.
      

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  292. How do you invoke javascript code in an iframe from parent page

    Initially iFrame needs to be accessed using either document.getElementBy or window.frames. After that contentWindow property of iFrame gives the access for targetFunction

    document.getElementById("targetFrame").contentWindow.targetFunction();
    window.frames[0].frameElement.contentWindow.targetFunction(); // Accessing iframe this way may not work in latest versions chrome and firefox
    

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  293. How do get the timezone offset from date

    You can use the getTimezoneOffset method of the date object. This method returns the time zone difference, in minutes, from current locale (host system settings) to UTC

    var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
    console.log(offset); // -480
    

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  294. How do you load CSS and JS files dynamically

    You can create both link and script elements in the DOM and append them as child to head tag. Let’s create a function to add script and style resources as below,

    function loadAssets(filename, filetype) {
      if (filetype == "css") {
        // External CSS file
        var fileReference = document.createElement("link");
        fileReference.setAttribute("rel", "stylesheet");
        fileReference.setAttribute("type", "text/css");
        fileReference.setAttribute("href", filename);
      } else if (filetype == "js") {
        // External JavaScript file
        var fileReference = document.createElement("script");
        fileReference.setAttribute("type", "text/javascript");
        fileReference.setAttribute("src", filename);
      }
      if (typeof fileReference != "undefined")
        document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0].appendChild(fileReference);
    }
    

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  295. What are the different methods to find HTML elements in DOM

    If you want to access any element in an HTML page, you need to start with accessing the document object. Later you can use any of the below methods to find the HTML element,

    1. document.getElementById(id): It finds an element by Id
    2. document.getElementsByTagName(name): It finds an element by tag name
    3. document.getElementsByClassName(name): It finds an element by class name

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  296. What is jQuery

    jQuery is a popular cross-browser JavaScript library that provides Document Object Model (DOM) traversal, event handling, animations and AJAX interactions by minimizing the discrepancies across browsers. It is widely famous with its philosophy of “Write less, do more”. For example, you can display welcome message on the page load using jQuery as below,

    $(document).ready(function () {
      // It selects the document and apply the function on page load
      alert("Welcome to jQuery world");
    });
    

    Note: You can download it from jquery’s official site or install it from CDNs, like google.

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  297. What is V8 JavaScript engine

    V8 is an open source high-performance JavaScript engine used by the Google Chrome browser, written in C++. It is also being used in the node.js project. It implements ECMAScript and WebAssembly, and runs on Windows 7 or later, macOS 10.12+, and Linux systems that use x64, IA-32, ARM, or MIPS processors. Note: It can run standalone, or can be embedded into any C++ application.

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  298. Why do we call javascript as dynamic language

    JavaScript is a loosely typed or a dynamic language because variables in JavaScript are not directly associated with any particular value type, and any variable can be assigned/reassigned with values of all types.

    let age = 50; // age is a number now
    age = "old"; // age is a string now
    age = true; // age is a boolean
    

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  299. What is a void operator

    The void operator evaluates the given expression and then returns undefined(i.e, without returning value). The syntax would be as below,

    void expression;
    void expression;
    

    Let’s display a message without any redirection or reload

    <a href="javascript:void(alert('Welcome to JS world'))">
      Click here to see a message
    </a>
    

    Note: This operator is often used to obtain the undefined primitive value, using “void(0)”.

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  300. How to set the cursor to wait

    The cursor can be set to wait in JavaScript by using the property “cursor”. Let’s perform this behavior on page load using the below function.

    function myFunction() {
      window.document.body.style.cursor = "wait";
    }
    

    and this function invoked on page load

    <body onload="myFunction()"></body>
    

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  301. How do you create an infinite loop

    You can create infinite loops using for and while loops without using any expressions. The for loop construct or syntax is better approach in terms of ESLint and code optimizer tools,

    for (;;) {}
    while (true) {}
    

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  302. Why do you need to avoid with statement

    JavaScript’s with statement was intended to provide a shorthand for writing recurring accesses to objects. So it can help reduce file size by reducing the need to repeat a lengthy object reference without performance penalty. Let’s take an example where it is used to avoid redundancy when accessing an object several times.

    a.b.c.greeting = "welcome";
    a.b.c.age = 32;
    

    Using with it turns this into:

    with (a.b.c) {
      greeting = "welcome";
      age = 32;
    }
    

    But this with statement creates performance problems since one cannot predict whether an argument will refer to a real variable or to a property inside the with argument.

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  303. What is the output of the following for loops

    for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
      // global scope
      setTimeout(() => console.log(i));
    }
    
    for (let i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
      // block scope
      setTimeout(() => console.log(i));
    }
    

    The output of the above for loops is 4 4 4 4 and 0 1 2 3

    Explanation: Due to the event queue/loop of javascript, the setTimeout callback function is called after the loop has been executed. Since the variable i is declared with the var keyword it became a global variable and the value was equal to 4 using iteration when the time setTimeout function is invoked. Hence, the output of the second loop is 4 4 4 4.

    Whereas in the second loop, the variable i is declared as the let keyword it becomes a block scoped variable and it holds a new value(0, 1 ,2 3) for each iteration. Hence, the output of the first loop is 0 1 2 3.

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  304. List down some of the features of ES6

    Below are the list of some new features of ES6,

    1. Support for constants or immutable variables
    2. Block-scope support for variables, constants and functions
    3. Arrow functions
    4. Default parameters
    5. Rest and Spread Parameters
    6. Template Literals
    7. Multi-line Strings
    8. Destructuring Assignment
    9. Enhanced Object Literals
    10. Promises
    11. Classes
    12. Modules

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  305. What is ES6

    ES6 is the sixth edition of the javascript language and it was released in June 2015. It was initially known as ECMAScript 6 (ES6) and later renamed to ECMAScript 2015. Almost all the modern browsers support ES6 but for the old browsers there are many transpilers, like Babel.js etc.

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  306. Can I redeclare let and const variables

    No, you cannot redeclare let and const variables. If you do, it throws below error

    Uncaught SyntaxError: Identifier 'someVariable' has already been declared
    

    Explanation: The variable declaration with var keyword refers to a function scope and the variable is treated as if it were declared at the top of the enclosing scope due to hoisting feature. So all the multiple declarations contributing to the same hoisted variable without any error. Let’s take an example of re-declaring variables in the same scope for both var and let/const variables.

    var name = "John";
    function myFunc() {
      var name = "Nick";
      var name = "Abraham"; // Re-assigned in the same function block
      alert(name); // Abraham
    }
    myFunc();
    alert(name); // John
    

    The block-scoped multi-declaration throws syntax error,

    let name = "John";
    function myFunc() {
      let name = "Nick";
      let name = "Abraham"; // Uncaught SyntaxError: Identifier 'name' has already been declared
      alert(name);
    }
    
    myFunc();
    alert(name);
    

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  307. Does the const variable make the value immutable

    No, the const variable doesn’t make the value immutable. But it disallows subsequent assignments(i.e, You can declare with assignment but can’t assign another value later)

    const userList = [];
    userList.push("John"); // Can mutate even though it can't re-assign
    console.log(userList); // ['John']
    

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  308. What are default parameters

    In ES5, we need to depend on logical OR operators to handle default values of function parameters. Whereas in ES6, Default function parameters feature allows parameters to be initialized with default values if no value or undefined is passed. Let’s compare the behavior with an examples,

    //ES5
    var calculateArea = function (height, width) {
      height = height || 50;
      width = width || 60;
    
      return width * height;
    };
    console.log(calculateArea()); //300
    

    The default parameters makes the initialization more simpler,

    //ES6
    var calculateArea = function (height = 50, width = 60) {
      return width * height;
    };
    
    console.log(calculateArea()); //300
    

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  309. What are template literals

    Template literals or template strings are string literals allowing embedded expressions. These are enclosed by the back-tick (`) character instead of double or single quotes. In ES6, this feature enables using dynamic expressions as below,

    var greeting = `Welcome to JS World, Mr. ${firstName} ${lastName}.`;
    

    In ES5, you need break string like below,

    var greeting = 'Welcome to JS World, Mr. ' + firstName + ' ' + lastName.`
    

    Note: You can use multi-line strings and string interpolation features with template literals.

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  310. How do you write multi-line strings in template literals

    In ES5, you would have to use newline escape characters(‘\n’) and concatenation symbols(+) in order to get multi-line strings.

    console.log("This is string sentence 1\n" + "This is string sentence 2");
    

    Whereas in ES6, You don’t need to mention any newline sequence character,

    console.log(`This is string sentence
    'This is string sentence 2`);
    

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  311. What are nesting templates

    The nesting template is a feature supported within template literals syntax to allow inner backticks inside a placeholder ${ } within the template. For example, the below nesting template is used to display the icons based on user permissions whereas outer template checks for platform type,

    const iconStyles = `icon ${
      isMobilePlatform()
        ? ""
        : `icon-${user.isAuthorized ? "submit" : "disabled"}`
    }`;
    

    You can write the above use case without nesting template features as well. However, the nesting template feature is more compact and readable.

    //Without nesting templates
    const iconStyles = `icon ${
      isMobilePlatform()
        ? ""
        : user.isAuthorized
        ? "icon-submit"
        : "icon-disabled"
    }`;
    

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  312. What are tagged templates

    Tagged templates are the advanced form of templates in which tags allow you to parse template literals with a function. The tag function accepts the first parameter as an array of strings and remaining parameters as expressions. This function can also return manipulated strings based on parameters. Let’s see the usage of this tagged template behavior of an IT professional skill set in an organization,

    var user1 = "John";
    var skill1 = "JavaScript";
    var experience1 = 15;
    
    var user2 = "Kane";
    var skill2 = "JavaScript";
    var experience2 = 5;
    
    function myInfoTag(strings, userExp, experienceExp, skillExp) {
      var str0 = strings[0]; // "Mr/Ms. "
      var str1 = strings[1]; // " is a/an "
      var str2 = strings[2]; // "in"
    
      var expertiseStr;
      if (experienceExp > 10) {
        expertiseStr = "expert developer";
      } else if (skillExp > 5 && skillExp <= 10) {
        expertiseStr = "senior developer";
      } else {
        expertiseStr = "junior developer";
      }
    
      return `${str0}${userExp}${str1}${expertiseStr}${str2}${skillExp}`;
    }
    
    var output1 = myInfoTag`Mr/Ms. ${user1} is a/an ${experience1} in ${skill1}`;
    var output2 = myInfoTag`Mr/Ms. ${user2} is a/an ${experience2} in ${skill2}`;
    
    console.log(output1); // Mr/Ms. John is a/an expert developer in JavaScript
    console.log(output2); // Mr/Ms. Kane is a/an junior developer in JavaScript
    

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  313. What are raw strings

    ES6 provides a raw strings feature using the String.raw() method which is used to get the raw string form of template strings. This feature allows you to access the raw strings as they were entered, without processing escape sequences. For example, the usage would be as below,

    var calculationString = String.raw`The sum of numbers is \n${
      1 + 2 + 3 + 4
    }!`;
    console.log(calculationString); // The sum of numbers is \n10!
    

    If you don’t use raw strings, the newline character sequence will be processed by displaying the output in multiple lines

    var calculationString = `The sum of numbers is \n${1 + 2 + 3 + 4}!`;
    console.log(calculationString);
    // The sum of numbers is
    // 10!
    

    Also, the raw property is available on the first argument to the tag function

    function tag(strings) {
      console.log(strings.raw[0]);
    }
    

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  314. What is destructuring assignment

    The destructuring assignment is a JavaScript expression that makes it possible to unpack values from arrays or properties from objects into distinct variables. Let’s get the month values from an array using destructuring assignment

    var [one, two, three] = ["JAN", "FEB", "MARCH"];
    
    console.log(one); // "JAN"
    console.log(two); // "FEB"
    console.log(three); // "MARCH"
    

    and you can get user properties of an object using destructuring assignment,

    var { name, age } = { name: "John", age: 32 };
    
    console.log(name); // John
    console.log(age); // 32
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  315. What are default values in destructuring assignment

    A variable can be assigned a default value when the value unpacked from the array or object is undefined during destructuring assignment. It helps to avoid setting default values separately for each assignment. Let’s take an example for both arrays and object use cases,

    Arrays destructuring:

    var x, y, z;
    
    [x = 2, y = 4, z = 6] = [10];
    console.log(x); // 10
    console.log(y); // 4
    console.log(z); // 6
    

    Objects destructuring:

    var { x = 2, y = 4, z = 6 } = { x: 10 };
    
    console.log(x); // 10
    console.log(y); // 4
    console.log(z); // 6
    

    ⬆ Back to Top

  316. How do you swap variables in destructuring assignment

    If you don’t use destructuring assignment, swapping two values requires a temporary variable. Whereas using a destructuring feature, two variable values can be swapped in one destructuring expression. Let’s swap two number variables in array destructuring assignment,

    var x = 10,
      y = 20;
    
    [x, y] = [y, x];
    console.log(x); // 20
    console.log(y); // 10
    

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  317. What are enhanced object literals

    Object literals make it easy to quickly create objects with properties inside the curly braces. For example, it provides shorter syntax for common object property definition as below.

    //ES6
    var x = 10,
      y = 20;
    obj = { x, y };
    console.log(obj); // {x: 10, y:20}
    //ES5
    var x = 10,
      y = 20;
    obj = { x: x, y: y };
    console.log(obj); // {x: 10, y:20}
    

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  318. What are dynamic imports

    The dynamic imports using import() function syntax allows us to load modules on demand by using promises or the async/await syntax. Currently this feature is in stage4 proposal. The main advantage of dynamic imports is reduction of our bundle’s sizes, the size/payload response of our requests and overall improvements in the user experience. The syntax of dynamic imports would be as below,

    import("./Module").then((Module) => Module.method());
    

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  319. What are the use cases for dynamic imports

    Below are some of the use cases of using dynamic imports over static imports,

    1. Import a module on-demand or conditionally. For example, if you want to load a polyfill on legacy browser

      if (isLegacyBrowser()) {
          import(···)
          .then(···);
      }
      
    2. Compute the module specifier at runtime. For example, you can use it for internationalization.

      import(`messages_${getLocale()}.js`).then(···);
      
    3. Import a module from within a regular script instead a module.

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  320. What are typed arrays

    Typed arrays are array-like objects from ECMAScript 6 API for handling binary data. JavaScript provides 12 Typed array types,

    1. Int8Array: An array of 8-bit signed integers
    2. Uint8Array: An array of 8-bit unsigned integers
    3. Uint8ClampedArray: An array of 8-bit unsigned integers clamped to 0-255
    4. Int16Array: An array of 16-bit signed integers
    5. Uint16Array: An array of 16-bit unsigned integers
    6. Int32Array: An array of 32-bit signed integers
    7. Uint32Array: An array of 32-bit unsigned integers
    8. BigInt64Array: An array of 64-bit signed BigInts
    9. BigUint64Array: An array of 64-bit unsigned BigInts
    10. Float16Array: An array of 16-bit floating point numbers
    11. Float32Array: An array of 32-bit floating point numbers
    12. Float64Array: An array of 64-bit floating point numbers

    For example, you can create an array of 8-bit signed integers as below

    const a = new Int8Array();
    // You can pre-allocate n bytes
    const bytes = 1024;
    const a = new Int8Array(bytes);
    

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  321. What are the advantages of module loaders

    The module loaders provides the below features,

    1. Dynamic loading
    2. State isolation
    3. Global namespace isolation
    4. Compilation hooks
    5. Nested virtualization

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  322. What is collation

    Collation is used for sorting a set of strings and searching within a set of strings. It is parameterized by locale and aware of Unicode. Let’s take comparison and sorting features,

    1. Comparison:
    var list = ["ä", "a", "z"]; // In German,  "ä" sorts with "a" Whereas in Swedish, "ä" sorts after "z"
    var l10nDE = new Intl.Collator("de");
    var l10nSV = new Intl.Collator("sv");
    console.log(l10nDE.compare("ä", "z") === -1); // true
    console.log(l10nSV.compare("ä", "z") === +1); // true
    
    1. Sorting:
    var list = ["ä", "a", "z"]; // In German,  "ä" sorts with "a" Whereas in Swedish, "ä" sorts after "z"
    var l10nDE = new Intl.Collator("de");
    var l10nSV = new Intl.Collator("sv");
    console.log(list.sort(l10nDE.compare)); // [ "a", "ä", "z" ]
    console.log(list.sort(l10nSV.compare)); // [ "a", "z", "ä" ]
    

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  323. What is for…of statement

    The for…of statement creates a loop iterating over iterable objects or elements such as built-in String, Array, Array-like objects (like arguments or NodeList), TypedArray, Map, Set, and user-defined iterables. The basic usage of for…of statement on arrays would be as below,

    let arrayIterable = [10, 20, 30, 40, 50];
    
    for (let value of arrayIterable) {
      value++;
      console.log(value); // 11 21 31 41 51
    }
    

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  324. What is the output of below spread operator array

    [..."John Resig"];
    

    The output of the array is [‘J’, ‘o’, ‘h’, ‘n’, ’ ’, ‘R’, ‘e’, ‘s’, ‘i’, ‘g’]

    Explanation: The string is an iterable type and the spread operator within an array maps every character of an iterable to one element. Hence, each character of a string becomes an element within an Array.

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  325. Is PostMessage secure

    Yes, postMessages can be considered very secure as long as the programmer/developer is careful about checking the origin and source of an arriving message. But if you try to send/receive a message without verifying its source will create cross-site scripting attacks.

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  326. What are the problems with postmessage target origin as wildcard

    The second argument of postMessage method specifies which origin is allowed to receive the message. If you use the wildcard “*” as an argument then any origin is allowed to receive the message. In this case, there is no way for the sender window to know if the target window is at the target origin when sending the message. If the target window has been navigated to another origin, the other origin would receive the data. Hence, this may lead to XSS vulnerabilities.

    targetWindow.postMessage(message, "*");
    

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  327. How do you avoid receiving postMessages from attackers

    Since the listener listens for any message, an attacker can trick the application by sending a message from the attacker’s origin, which gives an impression that the receiver received the message from the actual sender’s window. You can avoid this issue by validating the origin of the message on the receiver’s end using the “message.origin” attribute.

    For example, let’s check the sender’s origin http://www.some-sender.com on receiver side www.some-receiver.com,

    //Listener on http://www.some-receiver.com/
    window.addEventListener("message", function(message){
        if(/^http://www\.some-sender\.com$/.test(message.origin)){
             console.log('You received the data from valid sender', message.data);
       }
    });
    

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  328. Can I avoid using postMessages completely

    You cannot avoid using postMessages completely(or 100%). Even though your application doesn’t use postMessage considering the risks, a lot of third party scripts use postMessage to communicate with the third party service. So your application might be using postMessage without your knowledge.

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  329. Is postMessages synchronous

    The postMessages are synchronous in IE8 browser but they are asynchronous in IE9 and all other modern browsers (i.e, IE9+, Firefox, Chrome, Safari).Due to this asynchronous behaviour, we use a callback mechanism when the postMessage is returned.

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  330. What paradigm is Javascript

    JavaScript is a multi-paradigm language, supporting imperative/procedural programming, Object-Oriented Programming and functional programming. JavaScript supports Object-Oriented Programming with prototypical inheritance.

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  331. What is the difference between internal and external javascript

    Internal JavaScript: It is the source code within the script tag. External JavaScript: The source code is stored in an external file(stored with .js extension) and referred with in the tag.

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  332. Is JavaScript faster than server side script

    Yes, JavaScript is faster than server side scripts. Because JavaScript is a client-side script it does not require any web server’s help for its computation or calculation. So JavaScript is always faster than any server-side script like ASP, PHP, etc.

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  333. How do you get the status of a checkbox

    You can apply the checked property on the selected checkbox in the DOM. If the value is true it means the checkbox is checked, otherwise it is unchecked. For example, the below HTML checkbox element can be access using javascript as below:

    <input type="checkbox" id="checkboxname" value="Agree" /> Agree the
    conditions<br />
    
    console.log(document.getElementById(‘checkboxname’).checked); // true or false
    

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  334. What is the purpose of double tilde operator

    The double tilde operator(~~) is known as double NOT bitwise operator. This operator is a slightly quicker substitute for Math.floor().

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  335. How do you convert character to ASCII code

    You can use the String.prototype.charCodeAt() method to convert string characters to ASCII numbers. For example, let’s find ASCII code for the first letter of ‘ABC’ string,

    "ABC".charCodeAt(0); // returns 65
    

    Whereas String.fromCharCode() method converts numbers to equal ASCII characters.

    String.fromCharCode(65, 66, 67); // returns 'ABC'
    

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  336. What is ArrayBuffer

    An ArrayBuffer object is used to represent a generic, fixed-length raw binary data buffer. You can create it as below,

    let buffer = new ArrayBuffer(16); // create a buffer of length 16
    alert(buffer.byteLength); // 16
    

    To manipulate an ArrayBuffer, we need to use a “view” object.

    //Create a DataView referring to the buffer
    let view = new DataView(buffer);
    

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  337. What is the output of below string expression

    console.log("Welcome to JS world"[0]);
    

    The output of the above expression is “W”. Explanation: The bracket notation with specific index on a string returns the character at a specific location. Hence, it returns the character “W” of the string. Since this is not supported in IE7 and below versions, you may need to use the .charAt() method to get the desired result.

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  338. What is the purpose of Error object

    The Error constructor creates an error object and the instances of error objects are thrown when runtime errors occur. The Error object can also be used as a base object for user-defined exceptions. The syntax of error object would be as below,

    new Error([message[, fileName[, lineNumber]]])
    

    You can throw user defined exceptions or errors using Error object in try…catch block as below,

    try {
      if (withdraw > balance)
        throw new Error("Oops! You don't have enough balance");
    } catch (e) {
      console.log(e.name + ": " + e.message);
    }
    

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  339. What is the purpose of EvalError object

    The EvalError object indicates an error regarding the global eval() function. Even though this exception is not thrown by JavaScript anymore, the EvalError object remains for compatibility. The syntax of this expression would be as below,

    new EvalError([message[, fileName[, lineNumber]]])
    

    You can throw EvalError with in try…catch block as below,

    try {
      throw new EvalError('Eval function error', 'someFile.js', 100);
    } catch (e) {
      console.log(e.message, e.name, e.fileName);              // "Eval function error", "EvalError", "someFile.js"
    

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  340. What are the list of cases error thrown from non-strict mode to strict mode

    When you apply ‘use strict’; syntax, some of the below cases will throw a SyntaxError before executing the script

    1. When you use Octal syntax
    var n = 022;
    
    1. Using with statement
    2. When you use delete operator on a variable name
    3. Using eval or arguments as variable or function argument name
    4. When you use newly reserved keywords
    5. When you declare a function in a block and access it from outside of the block
    if (someCondition) {
      function f() {}
    }
    f(); // ReferenceError: f is not defined
    

    Hence, the errors from above cases are helpful to avoid errors in development/production environments.

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  341. Do all objects have prototypes

    No. All objects have prototypes except the base object or an object created with Object.create(null) method. The base object is Object.prototype, and its prototype is null.

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  342. What is the difference between a parameter and an argument

    Parameter is the variable name of a function definition whereas an argument represents the value given to a function when it is invoked. Let’s explain this with a simple function

    function myFunction(parameter1, parameter2, parameter3) {
      console.log(arguments[0]); // "argument1"
      console.log(arguments[1]); // "argument2"
      console.log(arguments[2]); // "argument3"
    }
    myFunction("argument1", "argument2", "argument3");
    

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  343. What is the purpose of some method in arrays

    The some() method is used to test whether at least one element in the array passes the test implemented by the provided function. The method returns a boolean value. Let’s take an example to test for any odd elements,

    var array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
    
    var odd = (element) => element % 2 !== 0;
    
    console.log(array.some(odd)); // true (the odd element exists)
    

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  344. How do you combine two or more arrays

    The concat() method is used to join two or more arrays by returning a new array containing all the elements. The syntax would be as below,

    array1.concat(array2, array3, ..., arrayX)
    

    Let’s take an example of array’s concatenation with veggies and fruits arrays,

    var veggies = ["Tomato", "Carrot", "Cabbage"];
    var fruits = ["Apple", "Orange", "Pears"];
    var veggiesAndFruits = veggies.concat(fruits);
    console.log(veggiesAndFruits); // Tomato, Carrot, Cabbage, Apple, Orange, Pears
    

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  345. What is the difference between Shallow and Deep copy

    There are two ways to copy an object,

    Shallow Copy: Shallow copy is a bitwise copy of an object. A new object is created that has an exact copy of the values in the original object. If any of the fields of the object are references to other objects, just the reference addresses are copied i.e., only the memory address is copied.

    Example

    var empDetails = {
      name: "John",
      age: 25,
      expertise: "Software Developer",
    };
    

    to create a duplicate

    var empDetailsShallowCopy = empDetails; //Shallow copying!
    

    if we change some property value in the duplicate one like this:

    empDetailsShallowCopy.name = "Johnson";
    

    The above statement will also change the name of empDetails, since we have a shallow copy. That means we’re losing the original data as well.

    Deep copy: A deep copy copies all fields, and makes copies of dynamically allocated memory pointed to by the fields. A deep copy occurs when an object is copied along with the objects to which it refers.

    Example

    var empDetails = {
      name: "John",
      age: 25,
      expertise: "Software Developer",
    };
    

    Create a deep copy by using the properties from the original object into new variable

    var empDetailsDeepCopy = {
      name: empDetails.name,
      age: empDetails.age,
      expertise: empDetails.expertise,
    };
    

    Now if you change empDetailsDeepCopy.name, it will only affect empDetailsDeepCopy & not empDetails

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  346. How do you create specific number of copies of a string

    The repeat() method is used to construct and return a new string which contains the specified number of copies of the string on which it was called, concatenated together. Remember that this method has been added to the ECMAScript 2015 specification. Let’s take an example of Hello string to repeat it 4 times,

    "Hello".repeat(4); // 'HelloHelloHelloHello'
    
  347. How do you return all matching strings against a regular expression

    The matchAll() method can be used to return an iterator of all results matching a string against a regular expression. For example, the below example returns an array of matching string results against a regular expression,

    let regexp = /Hello(\d?)/g;
    let greeting = "Hello1Hello2Hello3";
    
    let greetingList = [...greeting.matchAll(regexp)];
    
    console.log(greetingList[0][0]); //Hello1
    console.log(greetingList[1][0]); //Hello2
    console.log(greetingList[2][0]); //Hello3
    

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  348. How do you trim a string at the beginning or ending

    The trim method of string prototype is used to trim on both sides of a string. But if you want to trim especially at the beginning or ending of the string then you can use trimStart/trimLeft and trimEnd/trimRight methods. Let’s see an example of these methods on a greeting message,

    var greeting = "   Hello, Goodmorning!   ";
    
    console.log(greeting); // "   Hello, Goodmorning!   "
    console.log(greeting.trimStart()); // "Hello, Goodmorning!   "
    console.log(greeting.trimLeft()); // "Hello, Goodmorning!   "
    
    console.log(greeting.trimEnd()); // "   Hello, Goodmorning!"
    console.log(greeting.trimRight()); // "   Hello, Goodmorning!"
    

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  349. What is the output of below console statement with unary operator

    Let’s take console statement with unary operator as given below,

    console.log(+"Hello"); // NaN
    

    The output of the above console log statement returns NaN. Because the element is prefixed by the unary operator and the JavaScript interpreter will try to convert that element into a number type. Since the conversion fails, the value of the statement results in NaN value.

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  350. Does javascript uses mixins

    Mixin is a generic object-oriented programming term - is a class containing methods that can be used by other classes without a need to inherit from it. In JavaScript we can only inherit from a single object. ie. There can be only one [[prototype]] for an object.

    But sometimes we require to extend more than one, to overcome this we can use Mixin which helps to copy methods to the prototype of another class.

    Say for instance, we’ve two classes User and CleanRoom. Suppose we need to add CleanRoom functionality to User, so that user can clean the room at demand. Here’s where concept called mixins comes into picture.

    // mixin
    let cleanRoomMixin = {
      cleanRoom() {
        alert(`Hello ${this.name}, your room is clean now`);
      },
      sayBye() {
        alert(`Bye ${this.name}`);
      },
    };
    
    // usage:
    class User {
      constructor(name) {
        this.name = name;
      }
    }
    
    // copy the methods
    Object.assign(User.prototype, cleanRoomMixin);
    
    // now User can clean the room
    new User("Dude").cleanRoom(); // Hello Dude, your room is clean now!
    

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  351. What is a thunk function

    A thunk is just a function which delays the evaluation of the value. It doesn’t take any arguments but gives the value whenever you invoke the thunk. i.e, It is used not to execute now but it will be sometime in the future. Let’s take a synchronous example,

    const add = (x, y) => x + y;
    
    const thunk = () => add(2, 3);
    
    thunk(); // 5
    

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  352. What are asynchronous thunks

    The asynchronous thunks are useful to make network requests. Let’s see an example of network requests,

    function fetchData(fn) {
      fetch("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1")
        .then((response) => response.json())
        .then((json) => fn(json));
    }
    
    const asyncThunk = function () {
      return fetchData(function getData(data) {
        console.log(data);
      });
    };
    
    asyncThunk();
    

    The getData function won’t be called immediately but it will be invoked only when the data is available from API endpoint. The setTimeout function is also used to make our code asynchronous. The best real time example is redux state management library which uses the asynchronous thunks to delay the actions to dispatch.

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  353. What is the output of below function calls

    Code snippet:

    const circle = {
      radius: 20,
      diameter() {
        return this.radius * 2;
      },
      perimeter: () => 2 * Math.PI * this.radius,
    };
    
    console.log(circle.diameter());
    console.log(circle.perimeter());
    

    Output:

    The output is 40 and NaN. Remember that diameter is a regular function, whereas the value of perimeter is an arrow function. The this keyword of a regular function(i.e, diameter) refers to the surrounding scope which is a class(i.e, Shape object). Whereas this keyword of perimeter function refers to the surrounding scope which is a window object. Since there is no radius property on window objects it returns an undefined value and the multiple of number value returns NaN value.

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  354. How to remove all line breaks from a string

    The easiest approach is using regular expressions to detect and replace newlines in the string. In this case, we use replace function along with string to replace with, which in our case is an empty string.

    function remove_linebreaks( var message ) {
        return message.replace( /[\r\n]+/gm, "" );
    }
    

    In the above expression, g and m are for global and multiline flags.

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  355. What is the difference between reflow and repaint

    A repaint occurs when changes are made which affect the visibility of an element, but not its layout. Examples of this include outline, visibility, or background color. A reflow involves changes that affect the layout of a portion of the page (or the whole page). Resizing the browser window, changing the font, content changing (such as user typing text), using JavaScript methods involving computed styles, adding or removing elements from the DOM, and changing an element’s classes are a few of the things that can trigger reflow. Reflow of an element causes the subsequent reflow of all child and ancestor elements as well as any elements following it in the DOM.

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  356. What happens with negating an array

    Negating an array with ! character will coerce the array into a boolean. Since Arrays are considered to be truthy So negating it will return false.

    console.log(![]); // false
    

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  357. What happens if we add two arrays

    If you add two arrays together, it will convert them both to strings and concatenate them. For example, the result of adding arrays would be as below,

    console.log(["a"] + ["b"]); // "ab"
    console.log([] + []); // ""
    console.log(![] + []); // "false", because ![] returns false.
    

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  358. What is the output of prepend additive operator on falsy values

    If you prepend the additive(+) operator on falsy values(null, undefined, NaN, false, ""), the falsy value converts to a number value zero. Let’s display them on browser console as below,

    console.log(+null); // 0
    console.log(+undefined); // NaN
    console.log(+false); // 0
    console.log(+NaN); // NaN
    console.log(+""); // 0
    

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  359. How do you create self string using special characters

    The self string can be formed with the combination of []()!+ characters. You need to remember the below conventions to achieve this pattern.

    1. Since Arrays are truthful values, negating the arrays will produce false: ![] === false
    2. As per JavaScript coercion rules, the addition of arrays together will toString them: [] + [] === ""
    3. Prepend an array with + operator will convert an array to false, the negation will make it true and finally converting the result will produce value ‘1’: +(!(+[])) === 1

    By applying the above rules, we can derive below conditions

    (![] + [] === "false" + !+[]) === 1;
    

    Now the character pattern would be created as below,

          s               e               l               f
     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    
     (![] + [])[3] + (![] + [])[4] + (![] + [])[2] + (![] + [])[0]
     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    (![] + [])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]] +
    (![] + [])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]] +
    (![] + [])[+!+[]+!+[]] +
    (![] + [])[+[]]
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    (![]+[])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(![]+[])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(![]+[])[+!+[]+!+[]]+(![]+[])[+[]]
    

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  360. How do you remove falsy values from an array

    You can apply the filter method on the array by passing Boolean as a parameter. This way it removes all falsy values(0, undefined, null, false and "") from the array.

    const myArray = [false, null, 1, 5, undefined];
    myArray.filter(Boolean); // [1, 5] // is same as myArray.filter(x => x);
    

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  361. How do you get unique values of an array

    You can get unique values of an array with the combination of Set and rest expression/spread(…) syntax.

    console.log([...new Set([1, 2, 4, 4, 3])]); // [1, 2, 4, 3]
    

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  362. What is destructuring aliases

    Sometimes you would like to have a destructured variable with a different name than the property name. In that case, you’ll use a : newName to specify a name for the variable. This process is called destructuring aliases.

    const obj = { x: 1 };
    // Grabs obj.x as as { otherName }
    const { x: otherName } = obj;
    

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  363. How do you map the array values without using map method

    You can map the array values without using the map method by just using the from method of Array. Let’s map city names from Countries array,

    const countries = [
      { name: "India", capital: "Delhi" },
      { name: "US", capital: "Washington" },
      { name: "Russia", capital: "Moscow" },
      { name: "Singapore", capital: "Singapore" },
      { name: "China", capital: "Beijing" },
      { name: "France", capital: "Paris" },
    ];
    
    const cityNames = Array.from(countries, ({ capital }) => capital);
    console.log(cityNames); // ['Delhi, 'Washington', 'Moscow', 'Singapore', 'Beijing', 'Paris']
    

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  364. How do you empty an array

    You can empty an array quickly by setting the array length to zero.

    let cities = ["Singapore", "Delhi", "London"];
    cities.length = 0; // cities becomes []
    

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  365. How do you round numbers to certain decimals

    You can round numbers to a certain number of decimals using toFixed method from native javascript.

    let pie = 3.141592653;
    pie = pie.toFixed(3); // 3.142
    

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  366. What is the easiest way to convert an array to an object

    You can convert an array to an object with the same data using spread(…) operator.

    var fruits = ["banana", "apple", "orange", "watermelon"];
    var fruitsObject = { ...fruits };
    console.log(fruitsObject); // {0: "banana", 1: "apple", 2: "orange", 3: "watermelon"}
    

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  367. How do you create an array with some data

    You can create an array with some data or an array with the same values using fill method.

    var newArray = new Array(5).fill("0");
    console.log(newArray); // ["0", "0", "0", "0", "0"]
    

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  368. What are the placeholders from console object

    Below are the list of placeholders available from console object,

    1. %o — It takes an object,
    2. %s — It takes a string,
    3. %d — It is used for a decimal or integer These placeholders can be represented in the console.log as below
    const user = { name: "John", id: 1, city: "Delhi" };
    console.log(
      "Hello %s, your details %o are available in the object form",
      "John",
      user
    ); // Hello John, your details {name: "John", id: 1, city: "Delhi"} are available in object
    

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  369. Is it possible to add CSS to console messages

    Yes, you can apply CSS styles to console messages similar to html text on the web page.

    console.log(
      "%c The text has blue color, with large font and red background",
      "color: blue; font-size: x-large; background: red"
    );
    

    The text will be displayed as below, Screenshot

    Note: All CSS styles can be applied to console messages.

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  370. What is the purpose of dir method of console object

    The console.dir() is used to display an interactive list of the properties of the specified JavaScript object as JSON.

    const user = { name: "John", id: 1, city: "Delhi" };
    console.dir(user);
    

    The user object displayed in JSON representation Screenshot

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  371. Is it possible to debug HTML elements in console

    Yes, it is possible to get and debug HTML elements in the console just like inspecting elements.

    const element = document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0];
    console.log(element);
    

    It prints the HTML element in the console,

    Screenshot

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  372. How do you display data in a tabular format using console object

    The console.table() is used to display data in the console in a tabular format to visualize complex arrays or objects.

    const users = [
      { name: "John", id: 1, city: "Delhi" },
      { name: "Max", id: 2, city: "London" },
      { name: "Rod", id: 3, city: "Paris" },
    ];
    console.table(users);
    

    The data visualized in a table format,

    Screenshot Not: Remember that console.table() is not supported in IE.

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  373. How do you verify that an argument is a Number or not

    The combination of IsNaN and isFinite methods are used to confirm whether an argument is a number or not.

    function isNumber(n) {
      return !isNaN(parseFloat(n)) && isFinite(n);
    }
    

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  374. How do you create copy to clipboard button

    You need to select the content(using .select() method) of the input element and execute the copy command with execCommand (i.e, execCommand(‘copy’)). You can also execute other system commands like cut and paste.

    document.querySelector("#copy-button").onclick = function () {
      // Select the content
      document.querySelector("#copy-input").select();
      // Copy to the clipboard
      document.execCommand("copy");
    };
    

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  375. What is the shortcut to get timestamp

    You can use new Date().getTime() to get the current timestamp. There is an alternative shortcut to get the value.

    console.log(+new Date());
    console.log(Date.now());
    

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  376. How do you flattening multi dimensional arrays

    Flattening bi-dimensional arrays is trivial with Spread operator.

    const biDimensionalArr = [11, [22, 33], [44, 55], [66, 77], 88, 99];
    const flattenArr = [].concat(...biDimensionalArr); // [11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 77, 88, 99]
    

    But you can make it work with multi-dimensional arrays by recursive calls,

    function flattenMultiArray(arr) {
      const flattened = [].concat(...arr);
      return flattened.some((item) => Array.isArray(item))
        ? flattenMultiArray(flattened)
        : flattened;
    }
    const multiDimensionalArr = [11, [22, 33], [44, [55, 66, [77, [88]], 99]]];
    const flatArr = flattenMultiArray(multiDimensionalArr); // [11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 77, 88, 99]
    

    Also you can use the flat method of Array.

    const arr = [1, [2, 3], 4, 5, [6, 7]];
    const fllattenArr = arr.flat(); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
    
    // And for multiDimensional arrays
    const multiDimensionalArr = [11, [22, 33], [44, [55, 66, [77, [88]], 99]]];
    const oneStepFlat = multiDimensionalArr.flat(1); // [11, 22, 33, 44, [55, 66, [77, [88]], 99]]
    const towStep = multiDimensionalArr.flat(2); // [11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, [77, [88]], 99]
    const fullyFlatArray = multiDimensionalArr.flat(Infinity); // [11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 77, 88, 99]
    

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  377. What is the easiest multi condition checking

    You can use indexOf to compare input with multiple values instead of checking each value as one condition.

    // Verbose approach
    if (
      input === "first" ||
      input === 1 ||
      input === "second" ||
      input === 2
    ) {
      someFunction();
    }
    // Shortcut
    if (["first", 1, "second", 2].indexOf(input) !== -1) {
      someFunction();
    }
    

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  378. How do you capture browser back button

    The beforeunload event is triggered when the window, the document and its resources are about to be unloaded. This event is helpful to warn users about losing the current data and detect back button event.

     window.addEventListener('beforeunload', () => {
       console.log('Clicked browser back button');
     });
    

    You can also use popstate event to detect the browser back button. Note: The history entry has been activated using history.pushState method.

    window.addEventListener('popstate', () => {
       console.log('Clicked browser back button');
       box.style.backgroundColor = 'white';
     });
    
    const box = document.getElementById('div');
    
    box.addEventListener('click', () => {
     box.style.backgroundColor = 'blue';
     window.history.pushState({}, null, null);
    });
    

    In the preceeding code, When the box element clicked, its background color appears in blue color and changed to while color upon clicking the browser back button using popstate event handler. The state property of popstate contains the copy of history entry’s state object.

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  379. How do you disable right click in the web page

    The right click on the page can be disabled by returning false from the oncontextmenu attribute on the body element.

    <body oncontextmenu="return false;"></body>
    

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  380. What are wrapper objects

    Primitive Values like string,number and boolean don’t have properties and methods but they are temporarily converted or coerced to an object(Wrapper object) when you try to perform actions on them. For example, if you apply toUpperCase() method on a primitive string value, it does not throw an error but returns uppercase of the string.

    let name = "john";
    
    console.log(name.toUpperCase()); // Behind the scenes treated as console.log(new String(name).toUpperCase());
    

    i.e, Every primitive except null and undefined have Wrapper Objects and the list of wrapper objects are String,Number,Boolean,Symbol and BigInt.

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  381. What is AJAX

    AJAX stands for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML and it is a group of related technologies(HTML, CSS, JavaScript, XMLHttpRequest API etc) used to display data asynchronously. i.e. We can send data to the server and get data from the server without reloading the web page.

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  382. What are the different ways to deal with Asynchronous Code

    Below are the list of different ways to deal with Asynchronous code.

    1. Callbacks
    2. Promises
    3. Async/await
    4. Third-party libraries such as async.js,bluebird etc

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  383. How to cancel a fetch request

    Until a few days back, One shortcoming of native promises is no direct way to cancel a fetch request. But the new AbortController from js specification allows you to use a signal to abort one or multiple fetch calls. The basic flow of cancelling a fetch request would be as below,

    1. Create an AbortController instance
    2. Get the signal property of an instance and pass the signal as a fetch option for signal
    3. Call the AbortController’s abort property to cancel all fetches that use that signal For example, passing the same signal to multiple fetch calls will cancel all requests with that signal,
    const controller = new AbortController();
    const { signal } = controller;
    
    fetch("http://localhost:8000", { signal })
      .then((response) => {
        console.log(`Request 1 is complete!`);
      })
      .catch((e) => {
        if (e.name === "AbortError") {
          // We know it's been canceled!
        }
      });
    
    fetch("http://localhost:8000", { signal })
      .then((response) => {
        console.log(`Request 2 is complete!`);
      })
      .catch((e) => {
        if (e.name === "AbortError") {
          // We know it's been canceled!
        }
      });
    
    // Wait 2 seconds to abort both requests
    setTimeout(() => controller.abort(), 2000);
    

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  384. What is web speech API

    Web speech API is used to enable modern browsers recognize and synthesize speech(i.e, voice data into web apps). This API was introduced by W3C Community in the year 2012. It has two main parts:

    1. SpeechRecognition (Asynchronous Speech Recognition or Speech-to-Text): It provides the ability to recognize voice context from an audio input and respond accordingly. This is accessed by the SpeechRecognition interface. The example below shows how to use this API to get text from speech,
    window.SpeechRecognition =
      window.webkitSpeechRecognition || window.SpeechRecognition; // webkitSpeechRecognition for Chrome and SpeechRecognition for FF
    const recognition = new window.SpeechRecognition();
    recognition.onresult = (event) => {
      // SpeechRecognitionEvent type
      const speechToText = event.results[0][0].transcript;
      console.log(speechToText);
    };
    recognition.start();
    

    In this API, browser is going to ask you for permission to use your microphone

    1. SpeechSynthesis (Text-to-Speech): It provides the ability to recognize voice context from an audio input and respond. This is accessed by the SpeechSynthesis interface. For example, the below code is used to get voice/speech from text,
    if ("speechSynthesis" in window) {
      var speech = new SpeechSynthesisUtterance("Hello World!");
      speech.lang = "en-US";
      window.speechSynthesis.speak(speech);
    }
    

    The above examples can be tested on chrome(33+) browser’s developer console. Note: This API is still a working draft and only available in Chrome and Firefox browsers(ofcourse Chrome only implemented the specification)

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  385. What is minimum timeout throttling

    Both browser and NodeJS javascript environments throttles with a minimum delay that is greater than 0ms. That means even though setting a delay of 0ms will not happen instantaneously. Browsers: They have a minimum delay of 4ms. This throttle occurs when successive calls are triggered due to callback nesting(certain depth) or after a certain number of successive intervals. Note: The older browsers have a minimum delay of 10ms. Nodejs: They have a minimum delay of 1ms. This throttle happens when the delay is larger than 2147483647 or less than 1. The best example to explain this timeout throttling behavior is the order of below code snippet.

    function runMeFirst() {
      console.log("My script is initialized");
    }
    setTimeout(runMeFirst, 0);
    console.log("Script loaded");
    

    and the output would be in

    Script loaded
    My script is initialized
    

    If you don’t use setTimeout, the order of logs will be sequential.

    function runMeFirst() {
      console.log("My script is initialized");
    }
    runMeFirst();
    console.log("Script loaded");
    

    and the output is,

    My script is initialized
    Script loaded
    

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  386. How do you implement zero timeout in modern browsers

    You can’t use setTimeout(fn, 0) to execute the code immediately due to minimum delay of greater than 0ms. But you can use window.postMessage() to achieve this behavior.

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  387. What are tasks in event loop

    A task is any javascript code/program which is scheduled to be run by the standard mechanisms such as initially starting to run a program, run an event callback, or an interval or timeout being fired. All these tasks are scheduled on a task queue. Below are the list of use cases to add tasks to the task queue,

    1. When a new javascript program is executed directly from console or running by the <script> element, the task will be added to the task queue.
    2. When an event fires, the event callback added to task queue
    3. When a setTimeout or setInterval is reached, the corresponding callback added to task queue

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  388. What is microtask

    Microtask is used for the javascript code which needs to be executed immediately after the currently executing task/microtask is completed. They are kind of blocking in nature. i.e, The main thread will be blocked until the microtask queue is empty. The main sources of microtasks are Promise.resolve, Promise.reject, MutationObservers, IntersectionObservers etc

    Note: All of these microtasks are processed in the same turn of the event loop.

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  389. What are different event loops

    In JavaScript, there are multiple event loops that can be used depending on the context of your application. The most common event loops are:

    1. The Browser Event Loop
    2. The Node.js Event Loop
    • Browser Event Loop: The Browser Event Loop is used in client-side JavaScript applications and is responsible for handling events that occur within the browser environment, such as user interactions (clicks, keypresses, etc.), HTTP requests, and other asynchronous actions.

    • The Node.js Event Loop is used in server-side JavaScript applications and is responsible for handling events that occur within the Node.js runtime environment, such as file I/O, network I/O, and other asynchronous actions.

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  390. What is the purpose of queueMicrotask

    The queueMicrotask function is used to schedule a microtask, which is a function that will be executed asynchronously in the microtask queue. The purpose of queueMicrotask is to ensure that a function is executed after the current task has finished, but before the browser performs any rendering or handles user events.

    Example:

    console.log("Start"); //1
    
    queueMicrotask(() => {
      console.log("Inside microtask"); // 3
    });
    
    console.log("End"); //2
    

    By using queueMicrotask, you can ensure that certain tasks or callbacks are executed at the earliest opportunity during the JavaScript event loop, making it useful for performing work that needs to be done asynchronously but with higher priority than regular setTimeout or setInterval callbacks.

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  391. How do you use javascript libraries in typescript file

    It is known that not all JavaScript libraries or frameworks have TypeScript declaration files. But if you still want to use libraries or frameworks in your TypeScript files without getting compilation errors, the only solution is declare keyword along with a variable declaration. For example, let’s imagine you have a library called customLibrary that doesn’t have a TypeScript declaration and have a namespace called customLibrary in the global namespace. You can use this library in typescript code as below,

    declare var customLibrary;
    

    In the runtime, typescript will provide the type to the customLibrary variable as any type. The another alternative without using declare keyword is below

    var customLibrary: any;
    

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  392. What are the differences between promises and observables

    Some of the major difference in a tabular form

    Promises Observables
    Emits only a single value at a time Emits multiple values over a period of time(stream of values ranging from 0 to multiple)
    Eager in nature; they are going to be called immediately Lazy in nature; they require subscription to be invoked
    Promise is always asynchronous even though it resolved immediately Observable can be either synchronous or asynchronous
    Doesn’t provide any operators Provides operators such as map, forEach, filter, reduce, retry, and retryWhen etc
    Cannot be canceled Canceled by using unsubscribe() method

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  393. What is heap

    Heap(Or memory heap) is the memory location where objects are stored when we define variables. i.e, This is the place where all the memory allocations and de-allocation take place. Both heap and call-stack are two containers of JS runtime. Whenever runtime comes across variables and function declarations in the code it stores them in the Heap.

    Screenshot

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  394. What is an event table

    Event Table is a data structure that stores and keeps track of all the events which will be executed asynchronously like after some time interval or after the resolution of some API requests. i.e Whenever you call a setTimeout function or invoke async operation, it is added to the Event Table. It doesn’t not execute functions on it’s own. The main purpose of the event table is to keep track of events and send them to the Event Queue as shown in the below diagram.

    Screenshot

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  395. What is a microTask queue

    Microtask Queue is the new queue where all the tasks initiated by promise objects get processed before the callback queue. The microtasks queue are processed before the next rendering and painting jobs. But if these microtasks are running for a long time then it leads to visual degradation.

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  396. What is the difference between shim and polyfill

    A shim is a library that brings a new API to an older environment, using only the means of that environment. It isn’t necessarily restricted to a web application. For example, es5-shim.js is used to emulate ES5 features on older browsers (mainly pre IE9). Whereas polyfill is a piece of code (or plugin) that provides the technology that you, the developer, expect the browser to provide natively. In a simple sentence, a polyfill is a shim for a browser API.

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  397. How do you detect primitive or non primitive value type

    In JavaScript, primitive types include boolean, string, number, BigInt, null, Symbol and undefined. Whereas non-primitive types include the Objects. But you can easily identify them with the below function,

    var myPrimitive = 30;
    var myNonPrimitive = {};
    function isPrimitive(val) {
      return Object(val) !== val;
    }
    
    isPrimitive(myPrimitive);
    isPrimitive(myNonPrimitive);
    

    If the value is a primitive data type, the Object constructor creates a new wrapper object for the value. But If the value is a non-primitive data type (an object), the Object constructor will give the same object.

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  398. What is babel

    Babel is a JavaScript transpiler to convert ECMAScript 2015+ code into a backwards compatible version of JavaScript in current and older browsers or environments. Some of the main features are listed below,

    1. Transform syntax
    2. Polyfill features that are missing in your target environment (using @babel/polyfill)
    3. Source code transformations (or codemods)

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  399. Is Node.js completely single threaded

    Node is a single thread, but some of the functions included in the Node.js standard library(e.g, fs module functions) are not single threaded. i.e, Their logic runs outside of the Node.js single thread to improve the speed and performance of a program.

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  400. What are the common use cases of observables

    Some of the most common use cases of observables are web sockets with push notifications, user input changes, repeating intervals, etc

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  401. What is RxJS

    RxJS (Reactive Extensions for JavaScript) is a library for implementing reactive programming using observables that makes it easier to compose asynchronous or callback-based code. It also provides utility functions for creating and working with observables.

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  402. What is the difference between Function constructor and function declaration

    The functions which are created with Function constructor do not create closures to their creation contexts but they are always created in the global scope. i.e, the function can access its own local variables and global scope variables only. Whereas function declarations can access outer function variables(closures) too.

    Let’s see this difference with an example,

    Function Constructor:

    var a = 100;
    function createFunction() {
      var a = 200;
      return new Function("return a;");
    }
    console.log(createFunction()()); // 100
    

    Function declaration:

    var a = 100;
    function createFunction() {
      var a = 200;
      return function func() {
        return a;
      };
    }
    console.log(createFunction()()); // 200
    

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  403. What is a Short circuit condition

    Short circuit conditions are meant for condensed way of writing simple if statements. Let’s demonstrate the scenario using an example. If you would like to login to a portal with an authentication condition, the expression would be as below,

    if (authenticate) {
      loginToPorta();
    }
    

    Since the javascript logical operators evaluated from left to right, the above expression can be simplified using && logical operator

    authenticate && loginToPorta();
    

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  404. What is the easiest way to resize an array

    The length property of an array is useful to resize or empty an array quickly. Let’s apply length property on number array to resize the number of elements from 5 to 2,

    var array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    console.log(array.length); // 5
    
    array.length = 2;
    console.log(array.length); // 2
    console.log(array); // [1,2]
    

    and the array can be emptied too

    var array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    array.length = 0;
    console.log(array.length); // 0
    console.log(array); // []
    

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  405. What is an observable

    An Observable is basically a function that can return a stream of values either synchronously or asynchronously to an observer over time. The consumer can get the value by calling subscribe() method. Let’s look at a simple example of an Observable

    import { Observable } from "rxjs";
    
    const observable = new Observable((observer) => {
      setTimeout(() => {
        observer.next("Message from a Observable!");
      }, 3000);
    });
    
    observable.subscribe((value) => console.log(value));
    

    Screenshot

    Note: Observables are not part of the JavaScript language yet but they are being proposed to be added to the language

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  406. What is the difference between function and class declarations

    The main difference between function declarations and class declarations is hoisting. The function declarations are hoisted but not class declarations.

    Classes:

    const user = new User(); // ReferenceError
    
    class User {}
    

    Constructor Function:

    const user = new User(); // No error
    
    function User() {}
    

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  407. What is an async function

    An async function is a function declared with the async keyword which enables asynchronous, promise-based behavior to be written in a cleaner style by avoiding promise chains. These functions can contain zero or more await expressions.

    Let’s take a below async function example,

    async function logger() {
      let data = await fetch("http://someapi.com/users"); // pause until fetch returns
      console.log(data);
    }
    logger();
    

    It is basically syntax sugar over ES2015 promises and generators.

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  408. How do you prevent promises swallowing errors

    While using asynchronous code, JavaScript’s ES6 promises can make your life a lot easier without having callback pyramids and error handling on every second line. But Promises have some pitfalls and the biggest one is swallowing errors by default.

    Let’s say you expect to print an error to the console for all the below cases,

    Promise.resolve("promised value").then(function () {
      throw new Error("error");
    });
    
    Promise.reject("error value").catch(function () {
      throw new Error("error");
    });
    
    new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      throw new Error("error");
    });
    

    But there are many modern JavaScript environments that won’t print any errors. You can fix this problem in different ways,

    1. Add catch block at the end of each chain: You can add catch block to the end of each of your promise chains

      Promise.resolve("promised value")
        .then(function () {
          throw new Error("error");
        })
        .catch(function (error) {
          console.error(error.stack);
        });
      

      But it is quite difficult to type for each promise chain and verbose too.

    2. Add done method: You can replace first solution’s then and catch blocks with done method

      Promise.resolve("promised value").done(function () {
        throw new Error("error");
      });
      

      Let’s say you want to fetch data using HTTP and later perform processing on the resulting data asynchronously. You can write done block as below,

      getDataFromHttp()
        .then(function (result) {
          return processDataAsync(result);
        })
        .done(function (processed) {
          displayData(processed);
        });
      

      In future, if the processing library API changed to synchronous then you can remove done block as below,

      getDataFromHttp().then(function (result) {
        return displayData(processDataAsync(result));
      });
      

      and then you forgot to add done block to then block leads to silent errors.

    3. Extend ES6 Promises by Bluebird: Bluebird extends the ES6 Promises API to avoid the issue in the second solution. This library has a “default” onRejection handler which will print all errors from rejected Promises to stderr. After installation, you can process unhandled rejections

      Promise.onPossiblyUnhandledRejection(function (error) {
        throw error;
      });
      

      and discard a rejection, just handle it with an empty catch

      Promise.reject("error value").catch(function () {});
      

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  409. What is deno

    Deno is a simple, modern and secure runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript that uses V8 JavaScript engine and the Rust programming language. It solves the inherent problems of Node.Js and has been officially released in May 2018. Unlike Node.JS, by default Deno executes the code in a sandbox, which means that runtime has no access to below areas:

    1. The file system
    2. The network
    3. Execution of other scripts
    4. The environment variables

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  410. How do you make an object iterable in javascript

    By default, plain objects are not iterable. But you can make the object iterable by defining a Symbol.iterator property on it.

    Let’s demonstrate this with an example,

    const collection = {
      one: 1,
      two: 2,
      three: 3,
      [Symbol.iterator]() {
        const values = Object.keys(this);
        let i = 0;
        return {
          next: () => {
            return {
              value: this[values[i++]],
              done: i > values.length,
            };
          },
        };
      },
    };
    
    const iterator = collection[Symbol.iterator]();
    
    console.log(iterator.next()); // → {value: 1, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // → {value: 2, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // → {value: 3, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // → {value: undefined, done: true}
    

    The above process can be simplified using a generator function,

    const collection = {
      one: 1,
      two: 2,
      three: 3,
      [Symbol.iterator]: function* () {
        for (let key in this) {
          yield this[key];
        }
      },
    };
    const iterator = collection[Symbol.iterator]();
    console.log(iterator.next()); // {value: 1, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // {value: 2, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // {value: 3, done: false}
    console.log(iterator.next()); // {value: undefined, done: true}
    

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  411. What is a Proper Tail Call

    First, we should know about tail call before talking about “Proper Tail Call”. A tail call is a subroutine or function call performed as the final action of a calling function. Whereas Proper tail call(PTC) is a technique where the program or code will not create additional stack frames for a recursion when the function call is a tail call.

    For example, the below classic or head recursion of factorial function relies on stack for each step. Each step need to be processed upto n * factorial(n - 1)

    function factorial(n) {
      if (n === 0) {
        return 1;
      }
      return n * factorial(n - 1);
    }
    console.log(factorial(5)); //120
    

    But if you use Tail recursion functions, they keep passing all the necessary data it needs down the recursion without relying on the stack.

    function factorial(n, acc = 1) {
      if (n === 0) {
        return acc;
      }
      return factorial(n - 1, n * acc);
    }
    console.log(factorial(5)); //120
    

    The above pattern returns the same output as the first one. But the accumulator keeps track of total as an argument without using stack memory on recursive calls.

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  412. How do you check an object is a promise or not

    If you don’t know if a value is a promise or not, wrapping the value as Promise.resolve(value) which returns a promise

    function isPromise(object) {
      if (Promise && Promise.resolve) {
        return Promise.resolve(object) == object;
      } else {
        throw "Promise not supported in your environment";
      }
    }
    
    var i = 1;
    var promise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      resolve();
    });
    
    console.log(isPromise(i)); // false
    console.log(isPromise(promise)); // true
    

    Another way is to check for .then() handler type

    function isPromise(value) {
      return Boolean(value && typeof value.then === "function");
    }
    var i = 1;
    var promise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
      resolve();
    });
    
    console.log(isPromise(i)); // false
    console.log(isPromise(promise)); // true
    

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  413. How to detect if a function is called as constructor

    You can use new.target pseudo-property to detect whether a function was called as a constructor(using the new operator) or as a regular function call.

    1. If a constructor or function invoked using the new operator, new.target returns a reference to the constructor or function.
    2. For function calls, new.target is undefined.
    function Myfunc() {
      if (new.target) {
        console.log("called with new");
      } else {
        console.log("not called with new");
      }
    }
    
    new Myfunc(); // called with new
    Myfunc(); // not called with new
    Myfunc.call({}); // not called with new
    

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  414. What are the differences between arguments object and rest parameter

    There are three main differences between arguments object and rest parameters

    1. The arguments object is an array-like but not an array. Whereas the rest parameters are array instances.
    2. The arguments object does not support methods such as sort, map, forEach, or pop. Whereas these methods can be used in rest parameters.
    3. The rest parameters are only the ones that haven’t been given a separate name, while the arguments object contains all arguments passed to the function

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  415. What are the differences between spread operator and rest parameter

    Rest parameter collects all remaining elements into an array. Whereas Spread operator allows iterables( arrays / objects / strings ) to be expanded into single arguments/elements. i.e, Rest parameter is opposite to the spread operator.

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  416. What are the different kinds of generators

    There are five kinds of generators,

    1. Generator function declaration:

      function* myGenFunc() {
        yield 1;
        yield 2;
        yield 3;
      }
      const genObj = myGenFunc();
      
    2. Generator function expressions:

      const myGenFunc = function* () {
        yield 1;
        yield 2;
        yield 3;
      };
      const genObj = myGenFunc();
      
    3. Generator method definitions in object literals:

      const myObj = {
        *myGeneratorMethod() {
          yield 1;
          yield 2;
          yield 3;
        },
      };
      const genObj = myObj.myGeneratorMethod();
      
    4. Generator method definitions in class:

      class MyClass {
        *myGeneratorMethod() {
          yield 1;
          yield 2;
          yield 3;
        }
      }
      const myObject = new MyClass();
      const genObj = myObject.myGeneratorMethod();
      
    5. Generator as a computed property:

      const SomeObj = {
        *[Symbol.iterator]() {
          yield 1;
          yield 2;
          yield 3;
        },
      };
      
      console.log(Array.from(SomeObj)); // [ 1, 2, 3 ]
      

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  417. What are the built-in iterables

    Below are the list of built-in iterables in javascript,

    1. Arrays and TypedArrays
    2. Strings: Iterate over each character or Unicode code-points
    3. Maps: iterate over its key-value pairs
    4. Sets: iterates over their elements
    5. arguments: An array-like special variable in functions
    6. DOM collection such as NodeList

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  418. What are the differences between for…of and for…in statements

    Both for…in and for…of statements iterate over js data structures. The only difference is over what they iterate:

    1. for..in iterates over all enumerable property keys of an object
    2. for..of iterates over the values of an iterable object.

    Let’s explain this difference with an example,

    let arr = ["a", "b", "c"];
    
    arr.newProp = "newVlue";
    
    // key are the property keys
    for (let key in arr) {
      console.log(key); // 0, 1, 2 & newProp
    }
    
    // value are the property values
    for (let value of arr) {
      console.log(value); // a, b, c
    }
    

    Since for..in loop iterates over the keys of the object, the first loop logs 0, 1, 2 and newProp while iterating over the array object. The for..of loop iterates over the values of a arr data structure and logs a, b, c in the console.

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  419. How do you define instance and non-instance properties

    The Instance properties must be defined inside of class methods. For example, name and age properties defined inside constructor as below,

    class Person {
      constructor(name, age) {
        this.name = name;
        this.age = age;
      }
    }
    

    But Static(class) and prototype data properties must be defined outside of the ClassBody declaration. Let’s assign the age value for Person class as below,

    Person.staticAge = 30;
    Person.prototype.prototypeAge = 40;
    

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  420. What is the difference between isNaN and Number.isNaN?

    1. isNaN: The global function isNaN converts the argument to a Number and returns true if the resulting value is NaN.
    2. Number.isNaN: This method does not convert the argument. But it returns true when the type is a Number and value is NaN.

    Let’s see the difference with an example,

    isNaN(‘hello’);   // true
    Number.isNaN('hello'); // false
    

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  421. How to invoke an IIFE without any extra brackets?

    Immediately Invoked Function Expressions(IIFE) requires a pair of parenthesis to wrap the function which contains set of statements.

    (function (dt) {
      console.log(dt.toLocaleTimeString());
    })(new Date());
    

    Since both IIFE and void operator discard the result of an expression, you can avoid the extra brackets using void operator for IIFE as below,

    void function (dt) {
      console.log(dt.toLocaleTimeString());
    }(new Date());
    

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  422. Is that possible to use expressions in switch cases?

    You might have seen expressions used in switch condition but it is also possible to use for switch cases by assigning true value for the switch condition. Let’s see the weather condition based on temperature as an example,

    const weather = (function getWeather(temp) {
      switch (true) {
        case temp < 0:
          return "freezing";
        case temp < 10:
          return "cold";
        case temp < 24:
          return "cool";
        default:
          return "unknown";
      }
    })(10);
    

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  423. What is the easiest way to ignore promise errors?

    The easiest and safest way to ignore promise errors is void that error. This approach is ESLint friendly too.

    await promise.catch((e) => void e);
    

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  424. How do style the console output using CSS?

    You can add CSS styling to the console output using the CSS format content specifier %c. The console string message can be appended after the specifier and CSS style in another argument. Let’s print the red color text using console.log and CSS specifier as below,

    console.log("%cThis is a red text", "color:red");
    

    It is also possible to add more styles for the content. For example, the font-size can be modified for the above text

    console.log(
      "%cThis is a red text with bigger font",
      "color:red; font-size:20px"
    );
    

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  425. What is nullish coalescing operator (??)?

    It is a logical operator that returns its right-hand side operand when its left-hand side operand is null or undefined, and otherwise returns its left-hand side operand. This can be contrasted with the logical OR (||) operator, which returns the right-hand side operand if the left operand is any falsy value, not only null or undefined.

    console.log(null ?? true); // true
    console.log(false ?? true); // false
    console.log(undefined ?? true); // true
    

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  426. How do you group and nest console output?

    The console.group() can be used to group related log messages to be able to easily read the logs and use console.groupEnd()to close the group. Along with this, you can also nest groups which allows to output message in hierarchical manner.

    For example, if you’re logging a user’s details:

    console.group("User Details");
    console.log("name: Sudheer Jonna");
    console.log("job: Software Developer");
    
    // Nested Group
    console.group("Address");
    console.log("Street: Commonwealth");
    console.log("City: Los Angeles");
    console.log("State: California");
    
    // Close nested group
    console.groupEnd();
    
    // Close outer group
    console.groupEnd();
    

    You can also use console.groupCollapsed() instead of console.group() if you want the groups to be collapsed by default.

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  427. What is the difference between dense and sparse arrays?

    An array contains items at each index starting from first(0) to last(array.length - 1) is called as Dense array. Whereas if at least one item is missing at any index, the array is called as sparse.

    Let’s see the below two kind of arrays,

    const avengers = ["Ironman", "Hulk", "CaptainAmerica"];
    console.log(avengers[0]); // 'Ironman'
    console.log(avengers[1]); // 'Hulk'
    console.log(avengers[2]); // 'CaptainAmerica'
    console.log(avengers.length); // 3
    
    const justiceLeague = ["Superman", "Aquaman", , "Batman"];
    console.log(justiceLeague[0]); // 'Superman'
    console.log(justiceLeague[1]); // 'Aquaman'
    console.log(justiceLeague[2]); // undefined
    console.log(justiceLeague[3]); // 'Batman'
    console.log(justiceLeague.length); // 4
    

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  428. What are the different ways to create sparse arrays?

    There are 4 different ways to create sparse arrays in JavaScript

    1. Array literal: Omit a value when using the array literal

      const justiceLeague = ["Superman", "Aquaman", , "Batman"];
      console.log(justiceLeague); // ['Superman', 'Aquaman', empty ,'Batman']
      
    2. Array() constructor: Invoking Array(length) or new Array(length)

      const array = Array(3);
      console.log(array); // [empty, empty ,empty]
      
    3. Delete operator: Using delete array[index] operator on the array

      const justiceLeague = ["Superman", "Aquaman", "Batman"];
      delete justiceLeague[1];
      console.log(justiceLeague); // ['Superman', empty, ,'Batman']
      
    4. Increase length property: Increasing length property of an array

      const justiceLeague = ["Superman", "Aquaman", "Batman"];
      justiceLeague.length = 5;
      console.log(justiceLeague); // ['Superman', 'Aquaman', 'Batman', empty, empty]
      

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  429. What is the difference between setTimeout, setImmediate and process.nextTick?

    1. Set Timeout: setTimeout() is to schedule execution of a one-time callback after delay milliseconds.
    2. Set Immediate: The setImmediate function is used to execute a function right after the current event loop finishes.
    3. Process NextTick: If process.nextTick() is called in a given phase, all the callbacks passed to process.nextTick() will be resolved before the event loop continues. This will block the event loop and create I/O Starvation if process.nextTick() is called recursively.

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  430. How do you reverse an array without modifying original array?

    The reverse() method reverses the order of the elements in an array but it mutates the original array. Let’s take a simple example to demonistrate this case,

    const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
    const newArray = originalArray.reverse();
    
    console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    console.log(originalArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    

    There are few solutions that won’t mutate the original array. Let’s take a look.

    1. Using slice and reverse methods: In this case, just invoke the slice() method on the array to create a shallow copy followed by reverse() method call on the copy.

      const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const newArray = originalArray.slice().reverse(); //Slice an array gives a new copy
      
      console.log(originalArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
      console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      
    2. Using spread and reverse methods: In this case, let’s use the spread syntax (…) to create a copy of the array followed by reverse() method call on the copy.

      const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const newArray = [...originalArray].reverse();
      
      console.log(originalArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
      console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      
    3. Using reduce and spread methods: Here execute a reducer function on an array elements and append the accumulated array on right side using spread syntax

      const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const newArray = originalArray.reduce((accumulator, value) => {
        return [value, ...accumulator];
      }, []);
      
      console.log(originalArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
      console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      
    4. Using reduceRight and spread methods: Here execute a right reducer function(i.e. opposite direction of reduce method) on an array elements and append the accumulated array on left side using spread syntax

      const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const newArray = originalArray.reduceRight((accumulator, value) => {
        return [...accumulator, value];
      }, []);
      
      console.log(originalArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
      console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      
    5. Using reduceRight and push methods: Here execute a right reducer function(i.e. opposite direction of reduce method) on an array elements and push the iterated value to the accumulator

      const originalArray = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const newArray = originalArray.reduceRight((accumulator, value) => {
        accumulator.push(value);
        return accumulator;
      }, []);
      
      console.log(originalArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
      console.log(newArray); // [ 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      

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  431. How do you create custom HTML element?

    The creation of custom HTML elements involves two main steps,

    1. Define your custom HTML element: First you need to define some custom class by extending HTMLElement class. After that define your component properties (styles,text etc) using connectedCallback method. Note: The browser exposes a function called customElements.define inorder to reuse the element.

      class CustomElement extends HTMLElement {
        connectedCallback() {
          this.innerHTML = "This is a custom element";
        }
      }
      customElements.define("custom-element", CustomElement);
      
    2. Use custom element just like other HTML element: Declare your custom element as a HTML tag.
       <body>
            <custom-element>
       </body>
    

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  432. What is global execution context?

    The global execution context is the default or first execution context that is created by the JavaScript engine before any code is executed(i.e, when the file first loads in the browser). All the global code that is not inside a function or object will be executed inside this global execution context. Since JS engine is single threaded there will be only one global environment and there will be only one global execution context.

    For example, the below code other than code inside any function or object is executed inside the global execution context.

    var x = 10;
    
    function A() {
      console.log("Start function A");
    
      function B() {
        console.log("In function B");
      }
    
      B();
    }
    
    A();
    
    console.log("GlobalContext");
    

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  433. What is function execution context?

    Whenever a function is invoked, the JavaScript engine creates a different type of Execution Context known as a Function Execution Context (FEC) within the Global Execution Context (GEC) to evaluate and execute the code within that function.

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  434. What is debouncing?

    Debouncing is a programming pattern that allows delaying execution of some piece of code until a specified time to avoid unnecessary CPU cycles and API calls. This in turn enhance the web page performance. The debounce function make sure that your code is only triggered once per user input. The common usecases are Search box suggestions, text-field auto-saves, and eliminating double-button clicks.

    Let’s say you want to show suggestions for a search query, but only after a visitor has finished typing it. So here you write a debounce function where the user keeps writing the characters with in 500ms then previous timer cleared out using clearTimeout and reschedule API call/DB query for a new time—300 ms in the future.

    function debounce(func, timeout = 500) {
      let timer;
      return function (...args)  {
        clearTimeout(timer);
        timer = setTimeout(() => {
          func.apply(this, args);
        }, timeout);
      };
    }
    function fetchResults() {
      console.log("Fetching input suggestions");
    }
    const processChange = debounce(() => fetchResults());
    

    The debounce() function can be used on input, button and window events.

    Input:

    <input type="text" onkeyup="processChange()" />
    

    Button:

    <button onclick="processChange()">Click me</button>
    

    Windows event:

    window.addEventListener("scroll", processChange);
    

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  435. What is throttling?

    Throttling is a technique used to limit the execution of an event handler function in a given period of time, even when this event triggers continuously due to user actions. The common use cases are browser resizing, window scrolling, mouse movements etc.

    The below example creates a throttle function to reduce the number of events for each pixel change and trigger scroll event for each 100ms except for the first event.

    const throttle = (func, limit) => {
      let inThrottle;
      return (...args) => {
        if (!inThrottle) {
          func.apply(this, args);
          inThrottle = true;
          setTimeout(() => (inThrottle = false), limit);
        }
      };
    };
    window.addEventListener("scroll", () => {
      throttle(handleScrollAnimation, 100);
    });
    

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  436. What is optional chaining?

    According to MDN official docs, the optional chaining operator (?.) permits reading the value of a property located deep within a chain of connected objects without having to expressly validate that each reference in the chain is valid.

    The ?. operator is like the . chaining operator, except that instead of causing an error if a reference is nullish (null or undefined), the expression short-circuits with a return value of undefined. When used with function calls, it returns undefined if the given function does not exist.

    const adventurer = {
      name: "Alice",
      cat: {
        name: "Dinah",
      },
    };
    
    const dogName = adventurer.dog?.name;
    console.log(dogName);
    // expected output: undefined
    
    console.log(adventurer.someNonExistentMethod?.());
    // expected output: undefined
    

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  437. What is an environment record?

    According to ECMAScript specification 262 (9.1):

    Environment Record is a specification type used to define the association of Identifiers to specific variables and functions, based upon the lexical nesting structure of ECMAScript code.

    Usually an Environment Record is associated with some specific syntactic structure of ECMAScript code such as a FunctionDeclaration, a BlockStatement, or a Catch clause of a TryStatement.

    Each time such code is evaluated, a new Environment Record is created to record the identifier bindings that are created by that code.

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  438. How to verify if a variable is an array?

    It is possible to check if a variable is an array instance using 3 different ways,

    1. Array.isArray() method:

      The Array.isArray(value) utility function is used to determine whether value is an array or not. This function returns a true boolean value if the variable is an array and a false value if it is not.

      const numbers = [1, 2, 3];
      const user = { name: "John" };
      Array.isArray(numbers); // true
      Array.isArray(user); //false
      
    2. instanceof operator:

      The instanceof operator is used to check the type of an array at run time. It returns true if the type of a variable is an Array other false for other type.

      const numbers = [1, 2, 3];
      const user = { name: "John" };
      console.log(numbers instanceof Array); // true
      console.log(user instanceof Array); // false
      
    3. Checking constructor type:

      The constructor property of the variable is used to determine whether the variable Array type or not.

      const numbers = [1, 2, 3];
      const user = { name: "John" };
      console.log(numbers.constructor === Array); // true
      console.log(user.constructor === Array); // false
      

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  439. What is pass by value and pass by reference?

    Pass-by-value creates a new space in memory and makes a copy of a value. Primitives such as string, number, boolean etc will actually create a new copy. Hence, updating one value doesn’t impact the other value. i.e, The values are independent of each other.

    let a = 5;
    let b = a;
    
    b++;
    console.log(a, b); //5, 6
    

    In the above code snippet, the value of a is assigned to b and the variable b has been incremented. Since there is a new space created for variable b, any update on this variable doesn’t impact the variable a.

    Pass by reference doesn’t create a new space in memory but the new variable adopts a memory address of an initial variable. Non-primitives such as objects, arrays and functions gets the reference of the initiable variable. i.e, updating one value will impact the other variable.

    let user1 = {
      name: "John",
      age: 27,
    };
    let user2 = user1;
    user2.age = 30;
    
    console.log(user1.age, user2.age); // 30, 30
    

    In the above code snippet, updating the age property of one object will impact the other property due to the same reference.

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  440. What are the differences between primitives and non-primitives?

    JavaScript language has both primitives and non-primitives but there are few differences between them as below,

    Primitives Non-primitives
    These types are predefined Created by developer
    These are immutable Mutable
    Compare by value Compare by reference
    Stored in Stack Stored in heap
    Contain certain value Can contain NULL too

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  441. How do you create your own bind method using either call or apply method?

    The custom bind function needs to be created on Function prototype inorder to use it as other builtin functions. This custom function should return a function similar to original bind method and the implementation of inner function needs to use apply method call.

    The function which is going to bind using custom myOwnBind method act as the attached function(boundTargetFunction) and argument as the object for apply method call.

    Function.prototype.myOwnBind = function (whoIsCallingMe) {
      if (typeof this !== "function") {
        throw new Error(this + "cannot be bound as it's not callable");
      }
      const boundTargetFunction = this;
      return function () {
        boundTargetFunction.apply(whoIsCallingMe, arguments);
      };
    };
    

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  442. What are the differences between pure and impure functions?

    Some of the major differences between pure and impure function are as below,

Pure function Impure function
It has no side effects It causes side effects
It is always return the same result It returns different result on each call
Easy to read and debug Difficult to read and debug because they are affected by external code

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  1. What is referential transparency?

An expression in javascript that can be replaced by its value without affecting the behaviour of the program is called referential transparency. Pure functions are referentially transparent.

const add = (x, y) => x + y;
const multiplyBy2 = (x) => x * 2;

//Now add (2, 3) can be replaced by 5.

multiplyBy2(add(2, 3));

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  1. What are the possible side-effects in javascript?

    A side effect is the modification of the state through the invocation of a function or expression. These side effects make our function impure by default. Below are some side effects which make function impure,

  • Making an HTTP request. Asynchronous functions such as fetch and promise are impure.
  • DOM manipulations
  • Mutating the input data
  • Printing to a screen or console: For example, console.log() and alert()
  • Fetching the current time
  • Math.random() calls: Modifies the internal state of Math object

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  1. What are compose and pipe functions?

    The “compose” and “pipe” are two techniques commonly used in functional programming to simplify complex operations and make code more readable. They are not native to JavaScript and higher-order functions. the compose() applies right to left any number of functions to the output of the previous function.

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  2. What is module pattern?

    Module pattern is a designed pattern used to wrap a set of variables and functions together in a single scope returned as an object. JavaScript doesn’t have access specifiers similar to other languages(Java, Python, etc) to provide private scope. It uses IIFE (Immediately invoked function expression) to allow for private scopes. i.e., a closure that protect variables and methods.

    The module pattern looks like below,

    (function () {
      // Private variables or functions goes here.
    
      return {
        // Return public variables or functions here.
      };
    })();
    

    Let’s see an example of a module pattern for an employee with private and public access,

    const createEmployee = (function () {
      // Private
      const name = "John";
      const department = "Sales";
      const getEmployeeName = () => name;
      const getDepartmentName = () => department;
    
      // Public
      return {
        name,
        department,
        getName: () => getEmployeeName(),
        getDepartment: () => getDepartmentName(),
      };
    })();
    
    console.log(createEmployee.name);
    console.log(createEmployee.department);
    console.log(createEmployee.getName());
    console.log(createEmployee.getDepartment());
    

    Note: It mimic the concepts of classes with private variables and methods.

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  3. What is Function Composition?

    It is an approach where the result of one function is passed on to the next function, which is passed to another until the final function is executed for the final result.

    //example
    const double = (x) => x * 2;
    const square = (x) => x * x;
    
    var output1 = double(2);
    var output2 = square(output1);
    console.log(output2);
    
    var output_final = square(double(2));
    console.log(output_final);
    

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  4. How to use await outside of async function prior to ES2022?

    Prior to ES2022, if you attempted to use an await outside of an async function resulted in a SyntaxError.

    await Promise.resolve(console.log("Hello await")); // SyntaxError: await is only valid in async function
    

    But you can fix this issue with an alternative IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression) to get access to the feature.

    (async function () {
      await Promise.resolve(console.log("Hello await")); // Hello await
    })();
    

    In ES2022, you can write top-level await without writing any hacks.

    await Promise.resolve(console.log("Hello await")); //Hello await
    

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  1. What is the purpose of the this keyword in JavaScript?

  • The this keyword in JavaScript is a special variable that is used within a function to refer to the object on which the function is invoked. The value of this depends on how the function is called. It allows functions to access and interact with the object they are bound to.
  • The this keyword in JavaScript is a reference to the object that owns or invokes the current function. Its value is determined by the calling context.

    Example 1: this in a Global Context

    console.log(this);
    
    • In a global context, this refers to the global object (e.g., window in a browser).

    Example 2: this in a Function

    function displayThis() {
      console.log(this);
    }
    
    displayThis();
    
    • In a regular function, this refers to the global object.

    Example 3: this in a Method

    const person = {
      name: 'John',
      greet: function() {
      console.log('Hello, ' + this.name);
      }
    };
    
    person.greet();
    
    • In a method, this refers to the object that owns the method (person in the case).

    Example 4: this in an Event Handler

    document.getElementById('myButton').addEventListener('click', function() {
      console.log(this);
    });
    
    • In an event handler, this refers to the element that triggered the event (the button in this case).

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  1. What are the uses of closures?

    Closures are a powerful feature in programming languages like JavaScript. They allow functions to retain access to variables from their containing (enclosing) scope even after the outer function has finished executing. This means that a function defined within another function can access variables from the outer function, even if the outer function has already returned. Here are some common use cases of closures:

  • Data Privacy: Closures can be used to create private variables and methods. By defining variables within a function’s scope and returning inner functions that have access to those variables, you can create a form of encapsulation, limiting access to certain data or functionality.

  • Function Factories: Closures are often used to create functions with pre-set parameters. This is useful when you need to create multiple functions with similar behavior but different configurations.

  • Callback Functions: Closures are frequently used in asynchronous programming, such as handling event listeners or AJAX requests. The inner function captures variables from the outer scope and can access them when the callback is invoked.

  • Memoization: Closures can be used for memoization, a technique to optimize performance by caching the results of expensive function calls. The inner function can remember the results of previous calls and return the cached result if the same input is provided again.

  • iterators and Generators: Closures can be used to create iterators and generators, which are essential for working with collections of data in modern JavaScript.

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  1. What are the phases of execution context?

    The execution context in JavaScript is a data structure that stores the information necessary for executing a piece of code. It includes the code itself, the values of the variables used in the code, and the scope chain. The scope chain is a list of objects that are used to resolve variable names.

The execution context has two phases:

  • Creation phase: In this phase, the JavaScript engine creates the execution context and sets up the script’s environment. This includes creating the variable object and the scope chain.
  • Execution phase: In this phase, the JavaScript engine executes the code in the execution context. This includes evaluating expressions, assigning values to variables, and calling functions.

The execution context is created when a function is called. The function’s code is then executed in the execution context. When the function returns, the execution context is destroyed.

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  1. What are the possible reasons for memory leaks?

    Memory leaks can lead to poor performance, slow loading times and even crashes in web applications. Some of the common causes of memory leaks are listed below,

    1. The execessive usage of global variables or omitting the var keyword in local scope.
    2. Forgetting to clear the timers set up by setTimeout or setInterval.
    3. Closures retain references to variables from their parent scope, which leads to variables might not garbage collected even they are no longer used.
  2. What are the optimization techniques of V8 engine?

    V8 engine uses the below optimization techniques.

    1. Inline expansion: It is a compiler optimization by replacing the function calls with the corresponding function blocks.
    2. Copy elision: This is a compiler optimization method to prevent expensive extra objects from being duplicated or copied.
    3. Inline caching: It is a runtime optimization technique where it caches the execution of older tasks those can be lookup while executing the same task in the future.

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  3. What are the examples of built-in higher order functions?

    There are several built-in higher order functions exists on arrays, strings, DOM and promise methods in javascript. These higher order functions provides significant level of abstraction. The list of functions on these categories are listed below, 1. arrays: map, filter, reduce, sort, forEach, some etc. 2. DOM: The DOM method element.addEventListener(type, handler) also accepts the function handler as a second argument. 3. Strings: replace() method.

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  4. What are the benefits higher order functions?

    The main benefits of higher order functions are: 1. Abstraction 2. Reusability 3. Immutability 4. Modularity

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  1. How do you create polyfills for map, filter and reduce methods?

    The polyfills for array methods such as map, filter and reduce methods can be created using array prototype.

    1. map:

    The built-in Array.map method syntax will be helpful to write polyfill. The map method takes the callback function as an argument and that callback function can have below three arguments passed into it.

    i. Current value ii. Index of current value(optional) iii. array(optional)

    The syntax would like below,

    let newArray = arr.map(callback(currentValue[, index, arr) {
       // return new array after executing the code
    })
    

    Let’s build our map polyfill based on the above syntax,

      Array.prototype.myMap = function(cb) {
        let newArr = [];
        for(let i=0; i< this.length; i++) {
          newArr.push(cb(this[i], i, this));
        }
        return newArr;
      };
    
      const nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      const multiplyByTwo = nums.myMap(x => x * 2);
      console.log(multiplyByTwo); // [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]
    

    In the above code, custom method name ‘myMap’ has been used to avoid conflicts with built-in method.

    1. filter: Similar to map method, Array.filter method takes callback function as an argument and the callback function can have three agurguments passed into it.

      i. Current value ii. Index of current value(optional) iii. array(optional)

      The syntax looks like below,

      let newArray = arr.filter(callback(currentValue[, index, arr) {
       // return new array whose elements satisfy the callback conditions
      })
      

      Let’s build our filter polyfill based on the above syntax,

      Array.prototype.myFilter = function(cb) {
       let newArr = [];
       for(let i=0; i< this.length; i++) {
         if(cb(this[i], i, this)) {
            newArr.push(this[i]);
         }
       }
       return newArr;
      }
      
      const nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
      const evenNums = nums.myFilter(x => x % 2);
      console.log(evenNums); // [2, 4, 6]
      
    2. reduce:

      The built-in Array.reduce method syntax will be helpful to write our own polyfill. The reduce method takes the callback function as first argument and the initial value as second argument.

      The callback function can have four arguments passed into it. i. Accumulator ii. Current value iii. Index of current value(optional) iv. array(optional)

    The syntax would like below,

    arr.reduce(callback((acc, curr, i, arr) => {}), initValue);
    

    Let’s build our reduce polyfill based on the above syntax,

    Array.prototype.myReduce = function(cb, initialValue) {
        let accumulator = initialValue;
        for(let i=0; i< this.length; i++) {
            accumulator = accumulator ? cb(accumulator, this[i], i, this) : this[i];
        }
        return accumulator;
    }
      const nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
      const sum = nums.myReduce((acc, curr, i, arr) => {
        return acc += curr
      }, 0);
      console.log(sum); // 21
    

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  1. What is the difference between map and forEach functions?

    Both map and forEach functions are used to iterate over an arrays but there are some differences in their functionality.

    1. Returning values: The map method returns a new array with transformed elements whereas forEach method returns undefined eventhough both of them are doing the same job.

      const arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      arr.map(x => x * x); // [1, 4, 9, 16, 25]
      arr.forEach(x => x * x); // 
      
      The `forEach()` method in JavaScript always returns undefined. This is because forEach() is used to iterate over arrays and perform side effects on each element, rather than returning a `new array or transforming the original array`
      
    2. Chaining methods: The map method is chainable. i.e, It can be attached with reduce, filter, sort and other methods as well. Whereas forEach cannot be attached with any other methods because it returns undefined value.

      const arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
      arr.map(x => x * x).reduce((total, cur) => total + cur); // 55
      arr.forEach(x => x * x).reduce((total, cur) => total + cur);; //Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefine(reading 'reduce')
      
    3. Mutation: The map method doesn’t mutate the original array by returning new array. Whereas forEach method also doesn’t mutate the original array but it’s callback is allowed to mutate the original array.

    Note: Both these methods existed since ES5 onwards.

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  1. Give an example of statements affected by automatic semicolon insertion?

    The javascript parser will automatically add a semicolon while parsing the source code. For example, the below common statements affected by Automatic Semicolon Insertion(ASI).

    1. An empty statement
    2. var statement
    3. An expression statement
    4. do-while statement
    5. continue statement
    6. break statement
    7. return statement
    8. throw statement

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  1. What are the event phases of a browser?

    There are 3 phases in the lifecycle of an event propagation in JavaScript,

    1. Capturing phase: This phase goes down gradually from the top of the DOM tree to the target element when a nested element clicked. Before the click event reaching the final destination element, the click event of each parent’s element must be triggered.

    2. Target phase: This is the phase where the event originally occurred reached the target element .

    3. Bubbling phase: This is reverse of the capturing phase. In this pase, the event bubbles up from the target element through it’s parent element, an ancestor and goes all the way to the global window object.

    The pictorial representation of these 3 event phases in DOM looks like below,

    Screenshot

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  2. What are the real world use cases of proxy?

    Proxies are not used in regular day to day JavaScript work but they enabled many exciting programming patterns. Some of the real world use cases are listed below,

    1. Vue3 used proxy concept to implement reactive state
    2. SolidJS implemented reactive stores
    3. Immerjs built upon proxy to track updates to immutable updates
    4. ZenStack improved Prisma ORM for access control layer

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  3. What are hidden classes?

    Since JavaScript is a dynamic programming language, you can add or remove properties and methods from objects on the fly at runtime. This nature of JavaScript increases the dynamic dictionary lookups(because objects implemented as HashTables in memory) for retrieving a property on an object.

    Let’s consider the following example to see how the additional properties age and gender added at runtime.

     function Person(name) {
       this.name = name;
     }
    
     var person1 = new Person('John');
     var person2 = new Person('Randy');
    
     person1.age = 40;
     person1.gender = "Male";
    
     person2.gender = "Female";
     person2.age = 50;
    

    As a result, this behavior leads to lower JavaScript performance compared to the contiguous buffer method used in non-dynamic languages. The V8 engine provided a solution named hidden classes to optimize the access time when retrieving a property on an object. This optimization is achieved by sharing hidden classes among objects created in a similar fashion. These hidden classes are attached to each and every object to track its shape.

    When V8 engine sees the constructor function(e.g, Person) is declared, it creates a hidden class (let’s say Class01) without any offsets. Once the first property assignment statement (this.name = name) is executed, V8 engine will create a new hidden class (let’s say Class02), inheriting all properties from the previous hidden class (Class01), and assign the property to offset 0. This process enables compiler to skip dictionary lookup when you try to retrieve the same property(i.e, name). Instead, V8 will directly point to Class02. The same procedure happens when you add new properties to the object.

    For example, adding age and gender properties to Person constructor leads to transition of hidden classes(Class02 -> Class03 -> Class04). If you create a second object(Person2) based on the same Person object, both Class01 and Class02 hidden classes are going to be shared. However, the hidden classes Class03 and Class04 cannot be shared because second object has been modified with a different order of properties assignment.

    Since both the objects(person1 and person2) do not share the hidden classes, now V8 engine cannot use Inline Caching technique for the faster access of properties.

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  4. What is inline caching?

    Inline caching is an optimization technique based on the observation that repeated calls to same function tends to occur on same type of objects. The V8 compiler stores a cache of the type of objects that were passed as a parameter in recent method calls. Upon next time when same function is called, compiler can directly search for the type in cache.

    Let’s consider an example where the compiler stores the shape type in cache for repeated calls in the loop.

    let shape = {width : 30,  height: 20}; // Compiler store the type in cache as { width: <int>, height: <int>} after repeated calls
    
    function area(obj) {
      //Calculate area
    }
    for(let i=0; i<100; i++) {
      area(shape);
    }
    

    After few successful calls of the same area method to its same hidden class, V8 engine omits the hidden class lookup and simply adds the offset of the property to the object pointer itself. As a result, it increases the execution speed.

    There are mainly 3 types of inline caching possible:

    1. Monomorphic: This is a optimized caching technique in which there can be always same type of objects passed.
    2. Polymorphic: This ia slightly optimized caching technique in which limited number of different types of objects can be passed.
    3. Megamorphic: It is an unoptimized caching in which any number of different objects can be passed.

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  5. What are the different ways to execute external scripts?

    There are three different ways to execute external scripts,

    1. async: The script is downloaded in parallel to parsing the page, and executed as soon as it is available even before parsing completes. The parsing of the page is going to be interuppted once the script is downloaded completely and then the script is executed. Thereafter, the parsing of the remaining page will continue.

      The syntax for async usage is as shown below,

      <script src="demo.js" async></script>
      
    2. defer: The script is downloaded in parallel to parsing the page, and executed after the page has finished parsing.

      The syntax for defer usage is as shown below,

      <script src="demo.js" defer></script>
      
    3. Neither async or defer: The script is downloaded and executed immediately by blocking parsing of the page until the script execution is completed.

    Note: You should only use either async or defer attribute if the src attribute is present.

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  6. What is Lexical Scope?

    Lexical scope is the ability for a function scope to access variables from the parent scope.
    
    <script>
            function x(){
              var a=10;
              function y(){
                  console.log(a); // will print a , because of lexical scope, it will first look 'a' in 
              //its local memory space and then in its parent functions memory space
              }
              y();
          }
          x();
    </script>
    

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  7. How to detect system dark mode in javascript?

    The combination of Window.matchMedia() utility method along with media query is used to check if the user has selected a dark color scheme in their operating system settings or not. The CSS media query prefers-color-scheme needs to be passed to identify system color theme.

    The following javascript code describes the usage,

    const hasDarkColorScheme = () =>
        window.matchMedia &&
        window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)').matches;
    

    You can also watch changes to system color scheme using addEventListener,

    window
    .matchMedia("(prefers-color-scheme: dark)")
    .addEventListener("change", (event) => {
        const theme = event.matches ? "dark" : "light";
    });
    

    Note: The matchMedia method returns MediaQueryList object stores information from a media query.

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  8. What is the purpose of requestAnimationFrame method?

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  1. What is the difference between substring and substr methods?

    There are subtle differences between the substring() and substr() methods, so you should be careful not to get them confused.

  • The two parameters of substr() are start and length, while for substring(), they are start and end.
  • substr()’s start index will wrap to the end of the string if it is negative, while substring() will clamp it to 0.
  • Negative lengths in substr() are treated as zero, while substring() will swap the two indexes if end is less than start.

Furthermore, substr() is considered a legacy feature in ECMAScript, so it is best to avoid using it if possible.

const text = "Mozilla";
console.log(text.substring(2, 5)); // "zil"
console.log(text.substr(2, 3)); // "zil"

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  1. How to find the number of parameters expected by a function?

    The function’s object has a length property which tells you how many formal parameters expected by a function. This is a static value defined by the function, not the number of arguments the function is called with(arguments.length). The basic usage of length propery is,

    function multiply(x, y) {
    return x * y;
    }
    
    function sum(a, b, c) {
    return a + b +c;
    }
    
    console.log(multiply.length); //2
    console.log(sum.length); //3
    

    But there are few important rules which needs to be noted while using length property.

    1. Default values: Only the parameters which exists before a default value are considered.

      function sum(a, b=2, c=3) {
        return a + b + c;
      }
      console.log(sum.length); // 1
      
    2. Rest params: The rest parameters are excluded with in length property.

      function sum(a, b, ...moreArgs) {
        let total = a + b;
        for (const arg of moreArgs) {
           total += arg;
        }
        return total;
      }
      console.log(sum.length); // 2
      
    3. Destructuring patterns: Each destructuring pattern counted as a single parameter.

      function func([a, b], {x, y}){
       console.log(a+b, x, y);
      }
      
      console.log(func.length); // 2
      

    Note: The Function constructor is itself a function object and it has a length property of 1.

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  1. What is globalThis, and what is the importance of it?

    Nowadays JavaScript language is used in a wide variety of environments and each environment has its own object model. Due to this fact, there are different ways(syntax) to access the global object.

    1. In web browser, the global object is accessible via window, self, or frames.
    2. In Node environment, you have to use global.
    3. In Web workers, the global object is available through self.

The globalThis property provides a standard way of accessing the global object without writing various code snippet to support multiple environments. For example, the global object retuned from multiple environments as shown below,

 //1. browser environment
 console.log(globalThis);    // => Window {...}

 //2. node.js environment
 console.log(globalThis);    // => Object [global] {...}

 //3. web worker environment
 console.log(globalThis);    // => DedicatedWorkerGlobalScope {...}

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  1. What are the array mutation methods?

    JavaScript array methods can be categorized into two groups: 1. Mutating methods: These are the methods that directly modify the original array. 2. Non-mutating methods: These methods return a new array without altering the original one.

    There are 9 methods in total that mutate the arrays, 1. push: Adds one or more elements to the end of the array and returns the new length. 2. pop: Removes the last element from the array and returns that element. 3. unshift: Adds one or more elements to the beginning of the array and returns the new length.. 4. shift: Removes the first element from the array and returns that element. 5. splice: Adds or removes elements from the array at a specific index position. 6. sort: Sorts the elements of the array in-place based on a given sorting criteria. 7. reverse: Reverses the order of elements in the given array. 8. fill: Fills all elements of the array with a specific value. 9. copyWithIn: Copies a sequence of elements within the array to a specified target index in the same array.

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Coding Exercise

1. What is the output of below code

var car = new Vehicle("Honda", "white", "2010", "UK");
console.log(car);

function Vehicle(model, color, year, country) {
  this.model = model;
  this.color = color;
  this.year = year;
  this.country = country;
}
  • 1: Undefined
  • 2: ReferenceError
  • 3: null
  • 4: {model: “Honda”, color: “white”, year: “2010”, country: “UK”}
Answer

Answer: 4

The function declarations are hoisted similar to any variables. So the placement for Vehicle function declaration doesn’t make any difference.


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2. What is the output of below code

function foo() {
  let x = (y = 0);
  x++;
  y++;
  return x;
}

console.log(foo(), typeof x, typeof y);
  • 1: 1, undefined and undefined
  • 2: ReferenceError: X is not defined
  • 3: 1, undefined and number
  • 4: 1, number and number
Answer

Answer: 3

Of course the return value of foo() is 1 due to the increment operator. But the statement let x = y = 0 declares a local variable x. Whereas y declared as a global variable accidentally. This statement is equivalent to,

let x;
window.y = 0;
x = window.y;

Since the block scoped variable x is undefined outside of the function, the type will be undefined too. Whereas the global variable y is available outside the function, the value is 0 and type is number.


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3. What is the output of below code

function main() {
  console.log("A");
  setTimeout(function print() {
    console.log("B");
  }, 0);
  console.log("C");
}
main();
  • 1: A, B and C
  • 2: B, A and C
  • 3: A and C
  • 4: A, C and B
Answer

Answer: 4

The statements order is based on the event loop mechanism. The order of statements follows the below order,

  1. At first, the main function is pushed to the stack.
  2. Then the browser pushes the first statement of the main function( i.e, A’s console.log) to the stack, executing and popping out immediately.
  3. But setTimeout statement moved to Browser API to apply the delay for callback.
  4. In the meantime, C’s console.log added to stack, executed and popped out.
  5. The callback of setTimeout moved from Browser API to message queue.
  6. The main function popped out from stack because there are no statements to execute
  7. The callback moved from message queue to the stack since the stack is empty.
  8. The console.log for B is added to the stack and display on the console.


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4. What is the output of below equality check

console.log(0.1 + 0.2 === 0.3);
  • 1: false
  • 2: true
Answer

Answer: 1

This is due to the float point math problem. Since the floating point numbers are encoded in binary format, the addition operations on them lead to rounding errors. Hence, the comparison of floating points doesn’t give expected results. You can find more details about the explanation here 0.30000000000000004.com/


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5. What is the output of below code

var y = 1;
if (function f() {}) {
  y += typeof f;
}
console.log(y);
  • 1: 1function
  • 2: 1object
  • 3: ReferenceError
  • 4: 1undefined
Answer

Answer: 4

The main points in the above code snippets are,

  1. You can see function expression instead function declaration inside if statement. So it always returns true.
  2. Since it is not declared(or assigned) anywhere, f is undefined and typeof f is undefined too.

In other words, it is same as

var y = 1;
if ("foo") {
  y += typeof f;
}
console.log(y);

Note: It returns 1object for MS Edge browser


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6. What is the output of below code

function foo() {
  return;
  {
    message: "Hello World";
  }
}
console.log(foo());
  • 1: Hello World
  • 2: Object {message: “Hello World”}
  • 3: Undefined
  • 4: SyntaxError
Answer

Answer: 3

This is a semicolon issue. Normally semicolons are optional in JavaScript. So if there are any statements(in this case, return) missing semicolon, it is automatically inserted immediately. Hence, the function returned as undefined.

Whereas if the opening curly brace is along with the return keyword then the function is going to be returned as expected.

function foo() {
  return {
    message: "Hello World",
  };
}
console.log(foo()); // {message: "Hello World"}


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7. What is the output of below code

var myChars = ["a", "b", "c", "d"];
delete myChars[0];
console.log(myChars);
console.log(myChars[0]);
console.log(myChars.length);
  • 1: [empty, ‘b’, ‘c’, ‘d’], empty, 3
  • 2: [null, ‘b’, ‘c’, ‘d’], empty, 3
  • 3: [empty, ‘b’, ‘c’, ‘d’], undefined, 4
  • 4: [null, ‘b’, ‘c’, ‘d’], undefined, 4
Answer

Answer: 3

The delete operator will delete the object property but it will not reindex the array or change its length. So the number or elements or length of the array won’t be changed. If you try to print myChars then you can observe that it doesn’t set an undefined value, rather the property is removed from the array. The newer versions of Chrome use empty instead of undefined to make the difference a bit clearer.


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8. What is the output of below code in latest Chrome

var array1 = new Array(3);
console.log(array1);

var array2 = [];
array2[2] = 100;
console.log(array2);

var array3 = [, , ,];
console.log(array3);
  • 1: [undefined × 3], [undefined × 2, 100], [undefined × 3]
  • 2: [empty × 3], [empty × 2, 100], [empty × 3]
  • 3: [null × 3], [null × 2, 100], [null × 3]
  • 4: [], [100], []
Answer

Answer: 2

The latest chrome versions display sparse array(they are filled with holes) using this empty x n notation. Whereas the older versions have undefined x n notation. Note: The latest version of FF displays n empty slots notation.


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9. What is the output of below code

const obj = {
  prop1: function () {
    return 0;
  },
  prop2() {
    return 1;
  },
  ["prop" + 3]() {
    return 2;
  },
};

console.log(obj.prop1());
console.log(obj.prop2());
console.log(obj.prop3());
  • 1: 0, 1, 2
  • 2: 0, { return 1 }, 2
  • 3: 0, { return 1 }, { return 2 }
  • 4: 0, 1, undefined
Answer

Answer: 1

ES6 provides method definitions and property shorthands for objects. So both prop2 and prop3 are treated as regular function values.


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10. What is the output of below code

console.log(1 < 2 < 3);
console.log(3 > 2 > 1);
  • 1: true, true
  • 2: true, false
  • 3: SyntaxError, SyntaxError,
  • 4: false, false
Answer

Answer: 2

The important point is that if the statement contains the same operators(e.g, < or >) then it can be evaluated from left to right. The first statement follows the below order,

  1. console.log(1 < 2 < 3);
  2. console.log(true < 3);
  3. console.log(1 < 3); // True converted as 1 during comparison
  4. True

Whereas the second statement follows the below order,

  1. console.log(3 > 2 > 1);
  2. console.log(true > 1);
  3. console.log(1 > 1); // False converted as 0 during comparison
  4. False


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11. What is the output of below code in non-strict mode

function printNumbers(first, second, first) {
  console.log(first, second, first);
}
printNumbers(1, 2, 3);
  • 1: 1, 2, 3
  • 2: 3, 2, 3
  • 3: SyntaxError: Duplicate parameter name not allowed in this context
  • 4: 1, 2, 1
Answer

Answer: 2

In non-strict mode, the regular JavaScript functions allow duplicate named parameters. The above code snippet has duplicate parameters on 1st and 3rd parameters. The value of the first parameter is mapped to the third argument which is passed to the function. Hence, the 3rd argument overrides the first parameter.

Note: In strict mode, duplicate parameters will throw a Syntax Error.


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12. What is the output of below code

const printNumbersArrow = (first, second, first) => {
  console.log(first, second, first);
};
printNumbersArrow(1, 2, 3);
  • 1: 1, 2, 3
  • 2: 3, 2, 3
  • 3: SyntaxError: Duplicate parameter name not allowed in this context
  • 4: 1, 2, 1
Answer

Answer: 3

Unlike regular functions, the arrow functions doesn’t not allow duplicate parameters in either strict or non-strict mode. So you can see SyntaxError in the console.


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13. What is the output of below code

const arrowFunc = () => arguments.length;
console.log(arrowFunc(1, 2, 3));
  • 1: ReferenceError: arguments is not defined
  • 2: 3
  • 3: undefined
  • 4: null
Answer

Answer: 1

Arrow functions do not have an arguments, super, this, or new.target bindings. So any reference to arguments variable tries to resolve to a binding in a lexically enclosing environment. In this case, the arguments variable is not defined outside of the arrow function. Hence, you will receive a reference error.

Where as the normal function provides the number of arguments passed to the function

const func = function () {
  return arguments.length;
};
console.log(func(1, 2, 3));

But If you still want to use an arrow function then rest operator on arguments provides the expected arguments

const arrowFunc = (...args) => args.length;
console.log(arrowFunc(1, 2, 3));


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14. What is the output of below code

console.log(String.prototype.trimLeft.name === "trimLeft");
console.log(String.prototype.trimLeft.name === "trimStart");
  • 1: True, False
  • 2: False, True
Answer

Answer: 2

In order to be consistent with functions like String.prototype.padStart, the standard method name for trimming the whitespaces is considered as trimStart. Due to web web compatibility reasons, the old method name ‘trimLeft’ still acts as an alias for ‘trimStart’. Hence, the prototype for ‘trimLeft’ is always ‘trimStart’


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15. What is the output of below code

console.log(Math.max());
  • 1: undefined
  • 2: Infinity
  • 3: 0
  • 4: -Infinity
Answer

Answer: 4

-Infinity is the initial comparant because almost every other value is bigger. So when no arguments are provided, -Infinity is going to be returned. Note: Zero number of arguments is a valid case.


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16. What is the output of below code

console.log(10 == [10]);
console.log(10 == [[[[[[[10]]]]]]]);
  • 1: True, True
  • 2: True, False
  • 3: False, False
  • 4: False, True
Answer

Answer: 1

As per the comparison algorithm in the ECMAScript specification(ECMA-262), the above expression converted into JS as below

10 === Number([10].valueOf().toString()); // 10

So it doesn’t matter about number brackets([]) around the number, it is always converted to a number in the expression.


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17. What is the output of below code

console.log(10 + "10");
console.log(10 - "10");
  • 1: 20, 0
  • 2: 1010, 0
  • 3: 1010, 10-10
  • 4: NaN, NaN
Answer

Answer: 2

The concatenation operator(+) is applicable for both number and string types. So if any operand is string type then both operands concatenated as strings. Whereas subtract(-) operator tries to convert the operands as number type.


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18. What is the output of below code

console.log([0] == false);
if ([0]) {
  console.log("I'm True");
} else {
  console.log("I'm False");
}
  • 1: True, I’m True
  • 2: True, I’m False
  • 3: False, I’m True
  • 4: False, I’m False
Answer

Answer: 1

In comparison operators, the expression [0] converted to Number([0].valueOf().toString()) which is resolved to false. Whereas [0] just becomes a truthy value without any conversion because there is no comparison operator.

19. What is the output of below code

console.log([1, 2] + [3, 4]);
  • 1: [1,2,3,4]
  • 2: [1,2][3,4]
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: 1,23,4
Answer

Answer: 4

The + operator is not meant or defined for arrays. So it converts arrays into strings and concatenates them.


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20. What is the output of below code

const numbers = new Set([1, 1, 2, 3, 4]);
console.log(numbers);

const browser = new Set("Firefox");
console.log(browser);
  • 1: {1, 2, 3, 4}, {“F”, “i”, “r”, “e”, “f”, “o”, “x”}
  • 2: {1, 2, 3, 4}, {“F”, “i”, “r”, “e”, “o”, “x”}
  • 3: [1, 2, 3, 4], [“F”, “i”, “r”, “e”, “o”, “x”]
  • 4: {1, 1, 2, 3, 4}, {“F”, “i”, “r”, “e”, “f”, “o”, “x”}
Answer

Answer: 1

Since Set object is a collection of unique values, it won’t allow duplicate values in the collection. At the same time, it is case sensitive data structure.


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21. What is the output of below code

console.log(NaN === NaN);
  • 1: True
  • 2: False
Answer

Answer: 2

JavaScript follows IEEE 754 spec standards. As per this spec, NaNs are never equal for floating-point numbers.


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22. What is the output of below code

let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, NaN];
console.log(numbers.indexOf(NaN));
  • 1: 4
  • 2: NaN
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: -1
Answer

Answer: 4

The indexOf uses strict equality operator(===) internally and NaN === NaN evaluates to false. Since indexOf won’t be able to find NaN inside an array, it returns -1 always. But you can use Array.prototype.findIndex method to find out the index of NaN in an array or You can use Array.prototype.includes to check if NaN is present in an array or not.

let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, NaN];
console.log(numbers.findIndex(Number.isNaN)); // 4

console.log(numbers.includes(NaN)); // true


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23. What is the output of below code

let [a, ...b,] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(a, b);
  • 1: 1, [2, 3, 4, 5]
  • 2: 1, {2, 3, 4, 5}
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: 1, [2, 3, 4]
Answer

Answer: 3

When using rest parameters, trailing commas are not allowed and will throw a SyntaxError. If you remove the trailing comma then it displays 1st answer

let [a, ...b] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(a, b); // 1, [2, 3, 4, 5]


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25. What is the output of below code

async function func() {
  return 10;
}
console.log(func());
  • 1: Promise {<fulfilled>: 10}
  • 2: 10
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: Promise {<rejected>: 10}
Answer

Answer: 1

Async functions always return a promise. But even if the return value of an async function is not explicitly a promise, it will be implicitly wrapped in a promise. The above async function is equivalent to below expression,

function func() {
  return Promise.resolve(10);
}


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26. What is the output of below code

async function func() {
  await 10;
}
console.log(func());
  • 1: Promise {<fulfilled>: 10}
  • 2: 10
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: Promise {<resolved>: undefined}
Answer

Answer: 4

The await expression returns value 10 with promise resolution and the code after each await expression can be treated as existing in a .then callback. In this case, there is no return expression at the end of the function. Hence, the default return value of undefined is returned as the resolution of the promise. The above async function is equivalent to below expression,

function func() {
  return Promise.resolve(10).then(() => undefined);
}


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27. What is the output of below code

function delay() {
  return new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, 2000));
}

async function delayedLog(item) {
  await delay();
  console.log(item);
}

async function processArray(array) {
  array.forEach(item => {
    await delayedLog(item);
  })
}

processArray([1, 2, 3, 4]);
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: 1, 2, 3, 4
  • 3: 4, 4, 4, 4
  • 4: 4, 3, 2, 1
Answer

Answer: 1

Even though “processArray” is an async function, the anonymous function that we use for forEach is synchronous. If you use await inside a synchronous function then it throws a syntax error.


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28. What is the output of below code

function delay() {
  return new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 2000));
}

async function delayedLog(item) {
  await delay();
  console.log(item);
}

async function process(array) {
  array.forEach(async (item) => {
    await delayedLog(item);
  });
  console.log("Process completed!");
}
process([1, 2, 3, 5]);
  • 1: 1 2 3 5 and Process completed!
  • 2: 5 5 5 5 and Process completed!
  • 3: Process completed! and 5 5 5 5
  • 4: Process completed! and 1 2 3 5
Answer

Answer: 4

The forEach method will not wait until all items are finished but it just runs the tasks and goes next. Hence, the last statement is displayed first followed by a sequence of promise resolutions.

But you control the array sequence using for..of loop,

async function processArray(array) {
  for (const item of array) {
    await delayedLog(item);
  }
  console.log("Process completed!");
}


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29. What is the output of below code

var set = new Set();
set.add("+0").add("-0").add(NaN).add(undefined).add(NaN);
console.log(set);
  • 1: Set(4) {“+0”, “-0”, NaN, undefined}
  • 2: Set(3) {“+0”, NaN, undefined}
  • 3: Set(5) {“+0”, “-0”, NaN, undefined, NaN}
  • 4: Set(4) {“+0”, NaN, undefined, NaN}
Answer

Answer: 1

Set has few exceptions from equality check,

  1. All NaN values are equal
  2. Both +0 and -0 considered as different values


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30. What is the output of below code

const sym1 = Symbol("one");
const sym2 = Symbol("one");

const sym3 = Symbol.for("two");
const sym4 = Symbol.for("two");

console.log(sym1 === sym2, sym3 === sym4);
  • 1: true, true
  • 2: true, false
  • 3: false, true
  • 4: false, false
Answer

Answer: 3

Symbol follows below conventions,

  1. Every symbol value returned from Symbol() is unique irrespective of the optional string.
  2. Symbol.for() function creates a symbol in a global symbol registry list. But it doesn’t necessarily create a new symbol on every call, it checks first if a symbol with the given key is already present in the registry and returns the symbol if it is found. Otherwise a new symbol created in the registry.

Note: The symbol description is just useful for debugging purposes.


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31. What is the output of below code

const sym1 = new Symbol("one");
console.log(sym1);
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: one
  • 3: Symbol(‘one’)
  • 4: Symbol
Answer

Answer: 1

Symbol is a just a standard function and not an object constructor(unlike other primitives new Boolean, new String and new Number). So if you try to call it with the new operator will result in a TypeError


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32. What is the output of below code

let myNumber = 100;
let myString = "100";

if (!typeof myNumber === "string") {
  console.log("It is not a string!");
} else {
  console.log("It is a string!");
}

if (!typeof myString === "number") {
  console.log("It is not a number!");
} else {
  console.log("It is a number!");
}
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: It is not a string!, It is not a number!
  • 3: It is not a string!, It is a number!
  • 4: It is a string!, It is a number!
Answer

Answer: 4

The return value of typeof myNumber or typeof myString is always a truthy value (either “number” or “string”). The ! operator operates on either typeof myNumber or typeof myString, converting them to boolean values. Since the value of both !typeof myNumber and !typeof myString is false, the if condition fails, and control goes to else block.

To make the ! operator operate on the equality expression, one needs to add parentheses:

if (!(typeof myNumber === "string"))

Or simply use the inequality operator:

if (typeof myNumber !== "string")


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33. What is the output of below code

console.log(
  JSON.stringify({ myArray: ["one", undefined, function () {}, Symbol("")] })
);
console.log(
  JSON.stringify({ [Symbol.for("one")]: "one" }, [Symbol.for("one")])
);
  • 1: {“myArray”:[‘one’, undefined, {}, Symbol]}, {}
  • 2: {“myArray”:[‘one’, null,null,null]}, {}
  • 3: {“myArray”:[‘one’, null,null,null]}, “{ [Symbol.for(‘one’)]: ‘one’ }, [Symbol.for(‘one’)]”
  • 4: {“myArray”:[‘one’, undefined, function(){}, Symbol('')]}, {}
Answer

Answer: 2

The symbols has below constraints,

  1. The undefined, Functions, and Symbols are not valid JSON values. So those values are either omitted (in an object) or changed to null (in an array). Hence, it returns null values for the value array.
  2. All Symbol-keyed properties will be completely ignored. Hence it returns an empty object({}).


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34. What is the output of below code

class A {
  constructor() {
    console.log(new.target.name);
  }
}

class B extends A {
  constructor() {
    super();
  }
}

new A();
new B();
  • 1: A, A
  • 2: A, B
Answer

Answer: 2

Using constructors, new.target refers to the constructor (points to the class definition of class which is initialized) that was directly invoked by new. This also applies to the case if the constructor is in a parent class and was delegated from a child constructor.


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35. What is the output of below code

const [x, ...y, z] = [1, 2, 3, 4];
console.log(x, y, z);
  • 1: 1, [2, 3], 4
  • 2: 1, [2, 3, 4], undefined
  • 3: 1, [2], 3
  • 4: SyntaxError
Answer

Answer: 4

It throws a syntax error because the rest element should not have a trailing comma. You should always consider using a rest operator as the last element.


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36. What is the output of below code

const { a: x = 10, b: y = 20 } = { a: 30 };

console.log(x);
console.log(y);
  • 1: 30, 20
  • 2: 10, 20
  • 3: 10, undefined
  • 4: 30, undefined
Answer

Answer: 1

The object property follows below rules,

  1. The object properties can be retrieved and assigned to a variable with a different name
  2. The property assigned a default value when the retrieved value is undefined


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37. What is the output of below code

function area({ length = 10, width = 20 }) {
  console.log(length * width);
}

area();
  • 1: 200
  • 2: Error
  • 3: undefined
  • 4: 0
Answer

Answer: 2

If you leave out the right-hand side assignment for the destructuring object, the function will look for at least one argument to be supplied when invoked. Otherwise you will receive an error Error: Cannot read property 'length' of undefined as mentioned above.

You can avoid the error with either of the below changes,

  1. Pass at least an empty object:
function area({ length = 10, width = 20 }) {
  console.log(length * width);
}

area({});
  1. Assign default empty object:
function area({ length = 10, width = 20 } = {}) {
  console.log(length * width);
}

area();


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38. What is the output of below code

const props = [
  { id: 1, name: "John" },
  { id: 2, name: "Jack" },
  { id: 3, name: "Tom" },
];

const [, , { name }] = props;
console.log(name);
  • 1: Tom
  • 2: Error
  • 3: undefined
  • 4: John
Answer

Answer: 1

It is possible to combine Array and Object destructuring. In this case, the third element in the array props accessed first followed by name property in the object.


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39. What is the output of below code

function checkType(num = 1) {
  console.log(typeof num);
}

checkType();
checkType(undefined);
checkType("");
checkType(null);
  • 1: number, undefined, string, object
  • 2: undefined, undefined, string, object
  • 3: number, number, string, object
  • 4: number, number, number, number
Answer

Answer: 3

If the function argument is set implicitly(not passing argument) or explicitly to undefined, the value of the argument is the default parameter. Whereas for other falsy values('' or null), the value of the argument is passed as a parameter.

Hence, the result of function calls categorized as below,

  1. The first two function calls logs number type since the type of default value is number
  2. The type of '' and null values are string and object type respectively.


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40. What is the output of below code

function add(item, items = []) {
  items.push(item);
  return items;
}

console.log(add("Orange"));
console.log(add("Apple"));
  • 1: [‘Orange’], [‘Orange’, ‘Apple’]
  • 2: [‘Orange’], [‘Apple’]
Answer

Answer: 2

Since the default argument is evaluated at call time, a new object is created each time the function is called. So in this case, the new array is created and an element pushed to the default empty array.


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41. What is the output of below code

function greet(greeting, name, message = greeting + " " + name) {
  console.log([greeting, name, message]);
}

greet("Hello", "John");
greet("Hello", "John", "Good morning!");
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: [‘Hello’, ‘John’, ‘Hello John’], [‘Hello’, ‘John’, ‘Good morning!’]
Answer

Answer: 2

Since parameters defined earlier are available to later default parameters, this code snippet doesn’t throw any error.


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42. What is the output of below code

function outer(f = inner()) {
  function inner() {
    return "Inner";
  }
}
outer();
  • 1: ReferenceError
  • 2: Inner
Answer

Answer: 1

The functions and variables declared in the function body cannot be referred from default value parameter initializers. If you still try to access, it throws a run-time ReferenceError(i.e, inner is not defined).


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43. What is the output of below code

function myFun(x, y, ...manyMoreArgs) {
  console.log(manyMoreArgs);
}

myFun(1, 2, 3, 4, 5);
myFun(1, 2);
  • 1: [3, 4, 5], undefined
  • 2: SyntaxError
  • 3: [3, 4, 5], []
  • 4: [3, 4, 5], [undefined]
Answer

Answer: 3

The rest parameter is used to hold the remaining parameters of a function and it becomes an empty array if the argument is not provided.


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44. What is the output of below code

const obj = { key: "value" };
const array = [...obj];
console.log(array);
  • 1: [‘key’, ‘value’]
  • 2: TypeError
  • 3: []
  • 4: [‘key’]
Answer

Answer: 2

Spread syntax can be applied only to iterable objects. By default, Objects are not iterable, but they become iterable when used in an Array, or with iterating functions such as map(), reduce(), and assign(). If you still try to do it, it still throws TypeError: obj is not iterable.


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45. What is the output of below code

function* myGenFunc() {
  yield 1;
  yield 2;
  yield 3;
}
var myGenObj = new myGenFunc();
console.log(myGenObj.next().value);
  • 1: 1
  • 2: undefined
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: TypeError
Answer

Answer: 4

Generators are not constructible type. But if you still proceed to do, there will be an error saying “TypeError: myGenFunc is not a constructor”


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46. What is the output of below code

function* yieldAndReturn() {
  yield 1;
  return 2;
  yield 3;
}

var myGenObj = yieldAndReturn();
console.log(myGenObj.next());
console.log(myGenObj.next());
console.log(myGenObj.next());
  • 1: { value: 1, done: false }, { value: 2, done: true }, { value: undefined, done: true }
  • 2: { value: 1, done: false }, { value: 2, done: false }, { value: undefined, done: true }
  • 3: { value: 1, done: false }, { value: 2, done: true }, { value: 3, done: true }
  • 4: { value: 1, done: false }, { value: 2, done: false }, { value: 3, done: true }
Answer

Answer: 1

A return statement in a generator function will make the generator finish. If a value is returned, it will be set as the value property of the object and done property to true. When a generator is finished, subsequent next() calls return an object of this form: {value: undefined, done: true}.


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47. What is the output of below code

const myGenerator = (function* () {
  yield 1;
  yield 2;
  yield 3;
})();
for (const value of myGenerator) {
  console.log(value);
  break;
}

for (const value of myGenerator) {
  console.log(value);
}
  • 1: 1,2,3 and 1,2,3
  • 2: 1,2,3 and 4,5,6
  • 3: 1 and 1
  • 4: 1
Answer

Answer: 4

The generator should not be re-used once the iterator is closed. i.e, Upon exiting a loop(on completion or using break & return), the generator is closed and trying to iterate over it again does not yield any more results. Hence, the second loop doesn’t print any value.


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48. What is the output of below code

const num = 0o38;
console.log(num);
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: 38
Answer

Answer: 1

If you use an invalid number(outside of 0-7 range) in the octal literal, JavaScript will throw a SyntaxError. In ES5, it treats the octal literal as a decimal number.


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49. What is the output of below code

const squareObj = new Square(10);
console.log(squareObj.area);

class Square {
  constructor(length) {
    this.length = length;
  }

  get area() {
    return this.length * this.length;
  }

  set area(value) {
    this.area = value;
  }
}
  • 1: 100
  • 2: ReferenceError
Answer

Answer: 2

Unlike function declarations, class declarations are not hoisted. i.e, First You need to declare your class and then access it, otherwise it will throw a ReferenceError “Uncaught ReferenceError: Square is not defined”.

Note: Class expressions also applies to the same hoisting restrictions of class declarations.


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50. What is the output of below code

function Person() {}

Person.prototype.walk = function () {
  return this;
};

Person.run = function () {
  return this;
};

let user = new Person();
let walk = user.walk;
console.log(walk());

let run = Person.run;
console.log(run());
  • 1: undefined, undefined
  • 2: Person, Person
  • 3: SyntaxError
  • 4: Window, Window
Answer

Answer: 4

When a regular or prototype method is called without a value for this, the methods return an initial this value if the value is not undefined. Otherwise global window object will be returned. In our case, the initial this value is undefined so both methods return window objects.


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51. What is the output of below code

class Vehicle {
  constructor(name) {
    this.name = name;
  }

  start() {
    console.log(`${this.name} vehicle started`);
  }
}

class Car extends Vehicle {
  start() {
    console.log(`${this.name} car started`);
    super.start();
  }
}

const car = new Car("BMW");
console.log(car.start());
  • 1: SyntaxError
  • 2: BMW vehicle started, BMW car started
  • 3: BMW car started, BMW vehicle started
  • 4: BMW car started, BMW car started
Answer

Answer: 3

The super keyword is used to call methods of a superclass. Unlike other languages the super invocation doesn’t need to be a first statement. i.e, The statements will be executed in the same order of code.


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52. What is the output of below code

const USER = { age: 30 };
USER.age = 25;
console.log(USER.age);
  • 1: 30
  • 2: 25
  • 3: Uncaught TypeError
  • 4: SyntaxError
Answer

Answer: 2

Even though we used constant variables, the content of it is an object and the object’s contents (e.g properties) can be altered. Hence, the change is going to be valid in this case.


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53. What is the output of below code

console.log("🙂" === "🙂");
  • 1: false
  • 2: true
Answer

Answer: 2

Emojis are unicodes and the unicode for smile symbol is “U+1F642”. The unicode comparison of same emojies is equivalent to string comparison. Hence, the output is always true.


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54. What is the output of below code?

console.log(typeof typeof typeof true);
  • 1: string
  • 2: boolean
  • 3: NaN
  • 4: number
Answer

Answer: 1

The typeof operator on any primitive returns a string value. So even if you apply the chain of typeof operators on the return value, it is always string.


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55. What is the output of below code?

let zero = new Number(0);

if (zero) {
  console.log("If");
} else {
  console.log("Else");
}
  • 1: If
  • 2: Else
  • 3: NaN
  • 4: SyntaxError
Answer

Answer: 1
  1. The type of operator on new Number always returns object. i.e, typeof new Number(0) –> object.
  2. Objects are always truthy in if block

Hence the above code block always goes to if section.


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55. What is the output of below code in non strict mode?

let msg = "Good morning!!";

msg.name = "John";

console.log(msg.name);
  • 1: ""
  • 2: Error
  • 3: John
  • 4: Undefined
Answer

Answer: 4

It returns undefined for non-strict mode and returns Error for strict mode. In non-strict mode, the wrapper object is going to be created and get the mentioned property. But the object get disappeared after accessing the property in next line.


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56. What is the output of below code?

let count = 10;

(function innerFunc() {
  if (count === 10) {
    let count = 11;
    console.log(count);
  }
  console.log(count);
})();
  • 1: 11, 10
  • 2: 11, 11
  • 3: 10, 11
  • 4: 10, 10
Answer

Answer: 1

11 and 10 is logged to the console.

The innerFunc is a closure which captures the count variable from the outerscope. i.e, 10. But the conditional has another local variable count which overwrites the ourter count variable. So the first console.log displays value 11. Whereas the second console.log logs 10 by capturing the count variable from outerscope.


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57. What is the output of below code ?

  • 1: console.log(true && ‘hi’);
  • 2: console.log(true && ‘hi’ && 1);
  • 3: console.log(true && '' && 0);
Answer
  • 1: hi
  • 2: 1
  • 3: ''

Reason : The operator returns the value of the first falsy operand encountered when evaluating from left to right, or the value of the last operand if they are all truthy.

Note: Below these values are consider as falsy value

  • 1: 0
  • 2: ''
  • 3: null
  • 4: undefined
  • 5: NAN


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58. What is the output of below code ?

let arr = [1, 2, 3];
let str = "1,2,3";

console.log(arr == str);
  • 1: false
  • 2: Error
  • 3: true
Answer

Answer: 3

Arrays have their own implementation of toString method that returns a comma-separated list of elements. So the above code snippet returns true. In order to avoid conversion of array type, we should use === for comparison.


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59. What is the output of below code?

getMessage();

var getMessage = () => {
  console.log("Good morning");
};
  • 1: Good morning
  • 2: getMessage is not a function
  • 3: getMessage is not defined
  • 4: Undefined
Answer

Answer: 2

Hoisting will move variables and functions to be the top of scope. Even though getMessage is an arrow function the above function will considered as a variable due to it’s variable declaration or assignment. So the variables will have undefined value in memory phase and throws an error ‘getMessage is not a function’ at the code execution phase.


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60. What is the output of below code?

let quickPromise = Promise.resolve();

quickPromise.then(() => console.log("promise finished"));

console.log("program finished");
  • 1: program finished
  • 2: Cannot predict the order
  • 3: program finished, promise finished
  • 4: promise finished, program finished
Answer

Answer: 3

Even though a promise is resolved immediately, it won’t be executed immediately because its .then/catch/finally handlers or callbacks(aka task) are pushed into the queue. Whenever the JavaScript engine becomes free from the current program, it pulls a task from the queue and executes it. This is the reason why last statement is printed first before the log of promise handler.

Note: We call the above queue as “MicroTask Queue”


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61. What is the output of below code?

console
  .log("First line")
  [("a", "b", "c")].forEach((element) => console.log(element));
console.log("Third line");
  • 1: First line, then print a, b, c in a new line, and finally print Third line as next line
  • 2: First line, then print a, b, c in a first line, and print Third line as next line
  • 3: Missing semi-colon error
  • 4: Cannot read properties of undefined
Answer

Answer: 4

When JavaScript encounters a line break without a semicolon, the JavaScript parser will automatically add a semicolon based on a set of rules called Automatic Semicolon Insertion which determines whether line break as end of statement or not to insert semicolon. But it does not assume a semicolon before square brackets […]. So the first two lines considered as a single statement as below.

console
  .log("First line")
  [("a", "b", "c")].forEach((element) => console.log(element));

Hence, there will be cannot read properties of undefined error while applying the array square bracket on log function.


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62. Write a function that returns a random HEX color

Solution 1 (Iterative generation)

const HEX_ALPHABET = [
  "0",
  "1",
  "2",
  "3",
  "4",
  "5",
  "6",
  "7",
  "8",
  "9",
  "a",
  "b",
  "c",
  "d",
  "e",
  "f",
];
const HEX_PREFIX = "#";
const HEX_LENGTH = 6;

function generateRandomHex() {
  let randomHex = "";

  for (let i = 0; i < HEX_LENGTH; i++) {
    const randomIndex = Math.floor(Math.random() * HEX_ALPHABET.length);
    randomHex += HEX_ALPHABET[randomIndex];
  }

  return HEX_PREFIX + randomHex;
}

Solution 2 (One-liner)

const HEX_PREFIX = "#";
const HEX_RADIX = 16;
const HEX_LENGTH = 6;

function generateRandomHex() {
  return (
    HEX_PREFIX +
    Math.floor(Math.random() * 0xffffff)
      .toString(HEX_RADIX)
      .padStart(HEX_LENGTH, "0")
  );
}


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63. What is the output of below code?

var of = ["of"];
for (var of of of) {
  console.log(of);
}
  • 1: of
  • 2: SyntaxError: Unexpected token of
  • 3: SyntaxError: Identifier ‘of’ has already been declared
  • 4: ReferenceError: of is not defined
Answer

Answer: 1

In JavaScript, of is not considered as a reserved keyword. So the variable declaration with of is accepted and prints the array value of using for..of loop.

But if you use reserved keyword such as in then there will be a syntax error saying SyntaxError: Unexpected token in,

var in = ['in'];
for(var in in in) {
  console.log(in[in]);
}


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64. What is the output of below code?

const numbers = [11, 25, 31, 23, 33, 18, 200];
numbers.sort();
console.log(numbers);
  • 1: [11, 18, 23, 25, 31, 33, 200]
  • 2: [11, 18, 200, 23, 25, 31, 33]
  • 3: [11, 25, 31, 23, 33, 18, 200]
  • 4: Cannot sort numbers
Answer

Answer: 2

By default, the sort method sorts elements alphabetically. This is because elemented converted to strings and strings compared in UTF-16 code units order. Hence, you will see the above numbers not sorted as expected. In order to sort numerically just supply a comparator function which handles numeric sorts.

const numbers = [11, 25, 31, 23, 33, 18, 200];
numbers.sort((a, b) => a - b);
console.log(numbers);

Note: Sort() method changes the original array.


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65. What is the output order of below code?

setTimeout(() => {
  console.log("1");
}, 0);
Promise.resolve("hello").then(() => console.log("2"));
console.log("3");
  • 1: 1, 2, 3
  • 2: 1, 3, 2
  • 3: 3, 1, 2
  • 4: 3, 2, 1
Answer

Answer: 4

When the JavaScript engine parses the above code, the first two statements are asynchronous which will be executed later and third statement is synchronous statement which will be moved to callstack, executed and prints the number 3 in the console. Next, Promise is native in ES6 and it will be moved to Job queue which has high priority than callback queue in the execution order. At last, since setTimeout is part of WebAPI the callback function moved to callback queue and executed. Hence, you will see number 2 printed first followed by 1.


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66. What is the output of below code?

console.log(name);
console.log(message());
var name = "John";
(function message() {
  console.log("Hello John: Welcome");
});
  • 1: John, Hello John: Welcome
  • 2: undefined, Hello John, Welcome
  • 3: Reference error: name is not defined, Reference error: message is not defined
  • 4: undefined, Reference error: message is not defined
Answer

Answer: 4

IIFE(Immediately Invoked Function Expression) is just like any other function expression which won’t be hoisted. Hence, there will be a reference error for message call. The behavior would be the same with below function expression of message1,

console.log(name);
console.log(message());
var name = 'John';
var message = function () {
   console.log('Hello John: Welcome');
});


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67. What is the output of below code?

message();

function message() {
  console.log("Hello");
}
function message() {
  console.log("Bye");
}
  • 1: Reference error: message is not defined
  • 2: Hello
  • 3: Bye
  • 4: Compile time error
Answer

Answer: 3

As part of hoisting, initially JavaScript Engine or compiler will store first function in heap memory but later rewrite or replaces with redefined function content.


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68. What is the output of below code?

var currentCity = "NewYork";

var changeCurrentCity = function () {
  console.log("Current City:", currentCity);
  var currentCity = "Singapore";
  console.log("Current City:", currentCity);
};

changeCurrentCity();
  • 1: NewYork, Singapore
  • 2: NewYork, NewYork
  • 3: undefined, Singapore
  • 4: Singapore, Singapore
Answer

Answer: 3

Due to hositing feature, the variables declared with var will have undefined value in the creation phase so the outer variable currentCity will get same undefined value. But after few lines of code JavaScript engine found a new function call(changeCurrentCity()) to update the current city with var re-declaration. Since each function call will create a new execution context, the same variable will have undefined value before the declaration and new value(Singapore) after the declaration. Hence, the value undefined print first followed by new value Singapore in the execution phase.


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69. What is the output of below code in an order?

function second() {
  var message;
  console.log(message);
}

function first() {
  var message = "first";
  second();
  console.log(message);
}

var message = "default";
first();
console.log(message);
  • 1: undefined, first, default
  • 2: default, default, default
  • 3: first, first, default
  • 4: undefined, undefined, undefined
Answer

Answer: 1

Each context(global or functional) has it’s own variable environment and the callstack of variables in a LIFO order. So you can see the message variable value from second, first functions in an order followed by global context message variable value at the end.


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70. What is the output of below code?

var expressionOne = function functionOne() {
  console.log("functionOne");
};
functionOne();
  • 1: functionOne is not defined
  • 2: functionOne
  • 3: console.log(“functionOne”)
  • 4: undefined
Answer

Answer: 1

The function call functionOne is not going to be part of scope chain and it has it’s own execution context with the enclosed variable environment. i.e, It won’t be accessed from global context. Hence, there will be an error while invoking the function as functionOne is not defined.


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71. What is the output of below code?

const user = {
  name: "John",
  eat() {
    console.log(this);
    var eatFruit = function () {
      console.log(this);
    };
    eatFruit();
  },
};
user.eat();
  • 1: {name: “John”, eat: f}, {name: “John”, eat: f}
  • 2: Window , Window
  • 3: {name: “John”, eat: f}, undefined
  • 4: {name: “John”, eat: f}, Window
Answer

Answer: 4

this keyword is dynamic scoped but not lexically scoped . In other words, it doesn’t matter where this has been written but how it has been invoked really matter. In the above code snippet, the user object invokes eat function so this keyword refers to user object but eatFruit has been invoked by eat function and this will have default Window object.

The above pit fall fixed by three ways,

  1. In ES6, the arrow function will make this keyword as lexically scoped. Since the surrounding object of this object is user object, the eatFruit function will contain user object for this object.
const user = {
  name: "John",
  eat() {
    console.log(this);
    var eatFruit = () => {
      console.log(this);
    };
    eatFruit();
  },
};
user.eat();

The next two solutions have been used before ES6 introduced.

  1. It is possible create a reference of this into a separate variable and use that new variable inplace of this keyword inside eatFruit function. This is a common practice in jQuery and AngularJS before ES6 introduced.
const user = {
  name: "John",
  eat() {
    console.log(this);
    var self = this;
    var eatFruit = () => {
      console.log(self);
    };
    eatFruit();
  },
};
user.eat();
  1. The eatFruit function can bind explicitly with this keyword where it refers Window object.
const user = {
  name: "John",
  eat() {
    console.log(this);
    var eatFruit = function () {
      console.log(this);
    };
    return eatFruit.bind(this);
  },
};
user.eat()();


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72. What is the output of below code?

let message = "Hello World!";
message[0] = "J";
console.log(message);

let name = "John";
name = name + " Smith";
console.log(name);
  • 1: Jello World!, John Smith
  • 2: Jello World!, John
  • 3: Hello World!, John Smith
  • 4: Hello World!, John
Answer

Answer: 3

In JavaScript, primitives are immutable i.e. there is no way to change a primitive value once it gets created. So when you try to update the string’s first character, there is no change in the string value and prints the same initial value Hello World!. Whereas in the later example, the concatenated value is re-assigned to the same variable which will result into creation of new memory block with the reference pointing to John Smith value and the old memory block value(John) will be garbage collected.


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73. What is the output of below code?

let user1 = {
  name: "Jacob",
  age: 28,
};

let user2 = {
  name: "Jacob",
  age: 28,
};

console.log(user1 === user2);
  • 1: True
  • 2: False
  • 3: Compile time error
Answer

Answer: 2

In JavaScript, the variables such as objects, arrays and functions comes under pass by reference. When you try to compare two objects with same content, it is going to compare memory address or reference of those variables. These variables always create separate memory blocks hence the comparison is always going to return false value.


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74. What is the output of below code?

function greeting() {
  setTimeout(function () {
    console.log(message);
  }, 5000);
  const message = "Hello, Good morning";
}
greeting();
  • 1: Undefined
  • 2: Reference error:
  • 3: Hello, Good morning
  • 4: null
Answer

Answer: 3

The variable message is still treated as closure(since it has been used in inner function) eventhough it has been declared after setTimeout function. The function with in setTimeout function will be sent to WebAPI and the variable declaration executed with in 5 seconds with the assigned value. Hence, the text declared for the variable will be displayed.


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75. What is the output of below code?

const a = new Number(10);
const b = 10;
console.log(a === b);
  • 1: False
  • 2: True
Answer

Answer: 1

Eventhough both variables a and b refer a number value, the first declaration is based on constructor function and the type of the variable is going to be object type. Whereas the second declaration is primitive assignment with a number and the type is number type. Hence, the equality operator === will output false value.


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76. What is the type of below function?

function add(a, b) {
  console.log("The input arguments are: ", a, b);
  return a + b;
}
  • 1: Pure function
  • 2: Impure function
Answer

Answer: 2

Eventhough the above function returns the same result for the same arguments(input) that are passed in the function, the console.log() statement causes a function to have side effects because it affects the state of an external code. i.e, the console object’s state and depends on it to perform the job. Hence, the above function considered as impure function.


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77. What is the output of below code?

const promiseOne = new Promise((resolve, reject) => setTimeout(resolve, 4000));
const promiseTwo = new Promise((resolve, reject) => setTimeout(reject, 4000));

Promise.all([promiseOne, promiseTwo]).then((data) => console.log(data));
  • 1: [{status: “fulfilled”, value: undefined}, {status: “rejected”, reason: undefined}]
  • 2: [{status: “fulfilled”, value: undefined}, Uncaught(in promise)]
  • 3: Uncaught (in promise)
  • 4: [Uncaught(in promise), Uncaught(in promise)]
Answer

Answer: 3

The above promises settled at the same time but one of them resolved and other one rejected. When you use .all method on these promises, the result will be short circuted by throwing an error due to rejection in second promise. But If you use .allSettled method then result of both the promises will be returned irrespective of resolved or rejected promise status without throwing any error.

Promise.allSettled([promiseOne, promiseTwo]).then((data) => console.log(data));


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78. What is the output of below code?

try {
  setTimeout(() => {
    console.log("try block");
    throw new Error(`An exception is thrown`);
  }, 1000);
} catch (err) {
  console.log("Error: ", err);
}
  • 1: try block, Error: An exception is thrown
  • 2: Error: An exception is thrown
  • 3: try block, Uncaught Error: Exception is thrown
  • 4: Uncaught Error: Exception is thrown
Answer

Answer: 3

If you put setTimeout and setInterval methods inside the try clause and an exception is thrown, the catch clause will not catch any of them. This is because the try…catch statement works synchronously, and the function in the above code is executed asynchronously after a certain period of time. Hence, you will see runtime exception without catching the error. To resolve this issue, you have to put the try…catch block inside the function as below,

setTimeout(() => {
  try {
    console.log("try block");
    throw new Error(`An exception is thrown`);
  } catch (err) {
    console.log("Error: ", err);
  }
}, 1000);

You can use .catch() function in promises to avoid these issues with asynchronous code.


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79. What is the output of below code?

let a = 10;
if (true) {
  let a = 20;
  console.log(a, "inside");
}
console.log(a, "outside");
  • 1: 20, “inside” and 20, “outside”
  • 2: 20, “inside” and 10, “outside”
  • 3: 10, “inside” and 10, “outside”
  • 4: 10, “inside” and 20, “outside”
Answer

Answer: 2

The variable “a” declared inside “if” has block scope and does not affect the value of the outer “a” variable.


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80. What is the output of below code?

let arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, -6, 7];
arr.length = 0;
console.log(arr);
  • 1: 0
  • 2: Undefined
  • 3: null
  • 4: [ ]
Answer

Answer: 4

The length of the array ‘arr’ has been set to 0, so the array becomes empty.


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81. How do you verify two strings are anagrams or not?

An anagram is a word or phrase formed by rearranging all the letters of a different word or phrase exactly once. For example, the anagrams of “eat” word are “tea” and “ate”.

You can split each word into characters, followed by sort action and later join them back. After that you can compare those two words to verify whether those two words are anagrams or not.

function verifyAnagrams(word1, word2) {
  return word1.split("").sort().join("") === word2.split("").sort().join("")
}
console.log(verifyAnagrams("eat", "ate"));

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82. What is the output of below code?

printHello();

printMessage();

function printHello() {
  console.log('Hello')

  function printMessage() {
    console.log("Good day")
  }
}
  • 1: Hello, Good day
  • 2: Reference Error: printHello is not defined, Reference Error: printMessage is not defined
  • 3: Reference Error: printHello is not defined, Good day
  • 4: Hello, Reference Error: printMessage is not defined
Answer

Answer: 4

The function printHello is hoisted to the top of the global scope and prints “Hello” to the console. Even printMessage function is hoisted, but it is lifted to the local scope(in “printHello”) it was declared in. That is the reason you will endup with reference error for second function call.

But if the second function is invoked in the first function itself, there won’t be any reference error.

printHello();

function printHello() {
  printMessage();
  console.log('Hello')

  function printMessage() {
    console.log("Good day")
  }
}


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83. What is the time taken to execute below timeout callback?

  console.log("Start code");

  setTimeout(function() {
      console.log("Callback code");
  }, 5000);

  console.log("After callback");


  let startTime = new Date().getTime();
  let endTime = startTime;

  while(endTime <= startTime + 10000) {
      endTime = new Date().getTime();
  }

  console.log("End code");
  • 1: > 10 sec
  • 2: Immediately
  • 3: < 10 sec
  • 4: <= 5sec
Answer

Answer: 1

Even though there is a timer of 5 seconds supplied to setTimeout callback, it won’t get executed until the main thread is free and finished executing the remaining part of the code. In this example, the remaining code(while loop) takes 10seconds to finish it’s execution. In the mean time, the callback will be stored in callback queue upon completion of its 5 seconds timer. After 10 seconds, the callback will be moved to callstack because the callstack is empty by poping out global execution context.

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84. What is the output of below code?

let arr = ['wöchentlich','Woche', 'wäre', 'Wann'];
console.log(arr.sort());
  • 1: [‘wöchentlich’,‘Woche’, ‘wäre’, ‘Wann’]
  • 2: [‘Wann’, ‘wäre’, ‘Woche’, ‘wöchentlich’]
  • 3: [‘Wann’, ‘Woche’, ‘wäre’, ‘wöchentlich’]
  • 4: [‘wäre’, ‘Wann’, ‘wöchentlich’,‘Woche’]
Answer

Answer: 3

Javascript has a native method sort that allows sorting an array of elements in-place. It will treat each element as a string and sort it alphabetically. But if you try to sort an array of strings which has non-ASCII characters, you will receive a strange result. This is because characters with an accent have higher character codes.

In this case, the sort order of an array is [‘Wann’, ‘Woche’, ‘wäre’, ‘wöchentlich’].

If you want to sort an array of string values which has non-ASCII characters in an ascending order, there are two possible options like localeCompare and Intl.Collator provided by ECMAScript Internationalization API.

localeCompare:

let arr = ['wöchentlich','Woche', 'wäre', 'Wann'];
console.log(arr.sort((a, b) => a.localeCompare(b))); //['Wann', 'wäre', 'Woche', 'wöchentlich']

Intl.Collator:

let arr = ['wöchentlich','Woche', 'wäre', 'Wann'];
console.log(arr.sort(Intl.Collator().compare)); //['Wann', 'wäre', 'Woche', 'wöchentlich']

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85. What is the output of below code?

function func(a, b=2) {
  console.log(arguments.length);
}

func(undefined);
func();
  • 1: 1, 0
  • 2: 0, 0
  • 3: 0, 1
  • 4: 1, 1
Answer

Answer: 1

If a function is called with undefined, the undefined value is treated as a parameter. But if the function is not passed with any parameters, the arguments object doesn’t include any argument eventhough the function has default function parameter. Hence, the function invocation with undefined has one argument and function call without any arguments has 0 arguments.

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86. What is the output of below code?

function func(a, b=2) {
  console.log(arguments.length);
}

func(undefined);
func();
  • 1: 1, 0
  • 2: 0, 0
  • 3: 0, 1
  • 4: 1, 1
Answer

Answer: 1

If a function is called with undefined, the undefined value is treated as a parameter. But if the function is not passed with any parameters, the arguments object doesn’t include any argument eventhough the function has default function parameter. Hence, the function invocation with undefined has one argument and function call without any arguments has 0 arguments.

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Disclaimer

The questions provided in this repository are the summary of frequently asked questions across numerous companies. We cannot guarantee that these questions will actually be asked during your interview process, nor should you focus on memorizing all of them. The primary purpose is for you to get a sense of what some companies might ask — do not get discouraged if you don’t know the answer to all of them ⁠— that is ok!

Good luck with your interview 😊


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List of 1000 JavaScript Interview Questions

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