Smartial Wayback Machine Text Extractor



Live version of this page exists.
However, it is different from the archived page (2 redirect/s found...)


This article contains 1 images. You will find them at the very end of the article.

This article contains 244 words.

Jeremy Ashkenas – A Cup of CoffeeScript

Jeremy Ashkenas — A Cup of CoffeeScript

  • By:Guy Leech
  • Tweet: @webdirections
  • October 23, 2011

Web Directions South 2011, Sydney, October 13th.

  • Audio recording of session
  • Presentation slides
  • Session description
  • About Jeremy Ashkenas

Presentation slides

Session description

After a lost decade in the wilderness, JavaScript is starting to change and evolve. We’ll look at CoffeeScript, a little language that compiles into JavaScript, providing concise ways to to write many common JavaScript patterns. We’ll cover syntactic and semantic pain points, polyfills, sugar, and how you can start experimenting with your own flavor of JS.

About Jeremy Ashkenas

Jeremy Ashkenas is part of the Interactive News team at the New York Times, as well as the lead developer of DocumentCloud, helping news organizations analyze and publish the primary source documents behind the news. He works on CoffeeScript, Backbone.js, Underscore.js, Docco, Jammit, and Ruby-​​Processing, among other opensource projects.

Follow Jeremy on Twitter: @jashkenas

Related presentations

  • John Allsopp - Microformats
  • Rob Manson - Web standards based Augmented Reality
  • Michael Mahemoff - HTML5: Online and Offline
  • Max Wheeler - Location, location, geolocation
  • Pete Ottery - Designing for suits

Your opinion:



Images:

The images are downsized due to limited space here. The original dimensions may differ.
Click on the image to open it on a new tab.



Please close this window manually.