4.1 Overview of JavaScript - Computer Scienceepl425/notes/slides9-Javascript.pdf · JavaScript...
Transcript of 4.1 Overview of JavaScript - Computer Scienceepl425/notes/slides9-Javascript.pdf · JavaScript...
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
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Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 2
4.1 Overview of JavaScript
Originally developed by Netscape, as LiveScript
Became a joint venture of Netscape and Sun in 1995, renamed
JavaScript
Now standardized by the European Computer Manufacturers
Association as ECMA-262 (also ISO 16262)
We’ll call collections of JavaScript code scripts, not programs
JavaScript and Java are only related through syntax
JavaScript is dynamically typed
JavaScript’s support for objects is very different
http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 3
4.1 Overview of JavaScript (continued)
JavaScript can be used to:
• replace some of what is typically done with applets (except graphics)
• replace some of what is done with CGI - namely server-side programming (but no file operations or networking)
JavaScript is the primary language for Ajax
User interactions through forms are easy
The Document Object Model makes it possible to support dynamic HTML documents with JavaScript
Much of what we will do with JavaScript is event-driven computation - wait until Chapter 5
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 4
4.2 Object Orientation and JavaScript
JavaScript is NOT an object-oriented programming language
Does not support class-based inheritance - cannot support
polymorphism
Has prototype-based inheritance, which is much different
JavaScript objects are collections of properties, which are like the
members of classes in Java and C++
JavaScript has primitives for simple types
The root object in JavaScript is Object – all objects are derived from Object
All JavaScript objects are accessed through references
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JavaScript and JAVA
• JAVA is strongly typed - types are known at compile time and operand types (!"#$% !&'&(!)*+) are checked for compatibility
• Variables in JavaScript are dynamically typed–Compile-time type checking impossible
• Objects in JAVA are static: – their collection of data members and methods is fixed at
compile time
• JavaScript objects are dynamic: members of an object can change during execution
• Both have similar syntax
Browsers and XHTML/JavaScript Documents
• What happens when the browser encounters a JavaScript script in a document?
• Two approaches for embedding JavaScript in XHTML documents:–Explicit embedding (,-!. &+(*µ/!*(-)
– Implicit embedding (0#1,,-!- &+(*µ/!*(-)
<script type = "text/javaScript">
-- JavaScript script –
</script>
<script type = "text/javaScript" src = "myScript.js"> </script>
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Implicit vs Explicit JavaScript
• Explicit embedding:–Mixes two types of notation inside the same document
(bad for readability)
–Makes maintenance difficult - often different people manage the XHTML and the JavaScript
• Depending on its use, a JavaScript script that is explicitly embedded appears in:–The head of an XHTML document - for scripts that
produce content only upon request or for those that react to user interactions! These scripts contain function definitions and code associated with
form elements
–The body of an XHTML document - for scripts that are to be interpreted just once, as they are found
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JavaScript embedding
• Scripts are usually hidden from browsers that do not include JavaScript interpreters by putting them in special comments: <!--
-- JavaScript script – //-->
• This is also required by the XHTML validator
• Note that the comment closure is in a new line and is also a JS comment
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JavaScript objects
• Objects are collections of properties:
– data properties (primitive values and references to objects)
–method properties (methods)
• Objects are accessed indirectly through variables
– The properties of an object are referenced by attaching the
name of a property to the variable that references the object.
E.g. myCar.engine
• Objects are dynamic collections of property-value pairs
– Properties are names
– Values are data values or functions
• All functions are objects and are referenced through variables
9 Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 10
4.3 General Syntactic Characteristics
- Language Basics:
- Identifier form: begin with a letter or underscore,
followed by any number of letters, underscores,
and digits
- Case sensitive
- 25 reserved words, plus future reserved words
- Comments: both // and /* … */
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 11
4.4 Primitives, Operations & Expressions (continued)
All primitive values have one of the five primitive types: Number, String, Boolean, Undefined, or Null
Number, String, and Boolean have wrapper objects (Number, String, and Boolean) In the cases of Number and String, primitive values and objects are coerced back and forth so that primitive values can be treated essentially as if they were objects
Numeric literals – just like Java
All numeric values are stored in double-precision floating point
String literals are delimited by either ' or " - Can include escape sequences (e.g., \t) - All String literals are primitive values
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 12
4.4 Primitives, Operations & Expressions (continued)
Boolean values are true and false
The only Null value is null
The only Undefined value is undefined
JavaScript is dynamically typed – any variable can be used for
anything (primitive value or reference to any object)
The interpreter determines the type of a particular occurrence of a
variable (values do have type)
Variables can be either implicitly or explicitly declared
var sum = 0, today = "Monday", flag = false;
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 13
4.4 Primitives, Operations & Expressions (continued)
Numeric operators - ++, --, +, -, *, /, %
- All operations are in double precision - Same precedence and associativity as Java
The Math Object provides floor, round, max, min, trig functions, etc.
e.g., Math.cos(x)
The Number Object collects useful properties that have constant values
- Some useful properties: MAX_VALUE, MIN_VALUE, NaN,
POSITIVE_INFINITY, NEGATIVE_INFINITY, PI
- e.g., Number.MAX_VALUE
An arithmetic operation that creates overflow returns NaN
- NaN is not == to any number, not even itself
- Test for it with isNaN(x)
- Number object has the method, toString
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 14
4.4 Primitives, Operations, & Expressions (continued)
- String catenation operator : +
- Coercions (implicit type conversions) - Catenation coerces numbers to strings - Numeric operators (other than +) coerce strings to numbers (if either
operand of + is a string, it is assumed to be catenation)
- Conversions from strings to numbers that do not work return NaN
- Explicit conversions 1. Use the String and Number constructors
2. Use toString method of numbers
3. Use parseInt and parseFloat on strings
- String properties & methods: - length e.g., var len = str1.length; (a property)
- charAt(position) e.g., str.charAt(3)
- indexOf(string) e.g., str.indexOf('B')
- substring(from, to) e.g., str.substring(1, 3)
- toLowerCase() e.g., str.toLowerCase()
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 15
4.4 Primitives, Operations & Expressions (continued)
- The typeof operator
- Returns "number", "string", or "boolean" for Number, String, or
Boolean, "undefined" for Undefined, "function" for functions, and
"object" for objects and for NULL
- Assignment statements – just like C++ and Java
- The Date Object
- Create one with the Date constructor (no params): var today = new
Date();
- Local time methods of Date:
toLocaleString – returns a string of the date
getDate – returns the day of the month
getMonth – returns the month of the year (0 – 11)
getDay – returns the day of the week (0 – 6)
getFullYear – returns the year
getTime – returns the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970
getHours – returns the hour (0 – 23)
getMinutes – returns the minutes (0 – 59)
getMilliseconds – returns the millisecond (0 – 999)Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 16
4.5 Screen Output & Keyboard Input
JavaScript models the XHTML document inside which a script is embedded, as the Document object
The model for the browser display window is the Window object
- The Window object has two properties, document and window, which
refer to the Document and Window objects, respectively (window is self-
referential)
- The Document object has a method, write, which dynamically creates
content - The parameter is a string, often catenated from parts, some of which are variables e.g., document.write("Answer: " + result + "<br />");
- The parameter is sent to the browser, so it can be anything that can appear in an HTML document (<br />, but not \n)
- The Window object has three methods for creating dialog boxes, alert,
confirm, and prompt
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 18
4.5 Screen Output (continued)
1. alert("Hej! \n");
- Parameter is plain text, not HTML - Opens a dialog box which displays the parameter string and an OK button
- It waits for the user to press the OK button
2. confirm("Do you want to continue?");
- Opens a dialog box and displays the parameter and two buttons, OK and Cancel
- Returns a Boolean value, depending on which button was pressed (it waits for one)
3. prompt("What is your name?", "");
- Opens a dialog box and displays its string parameter, along with a text box and two buttons, OK and Cancel
- The second parameter is for a default response if the user presses OK without
typing a response in the text box (waits for OK)
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 22
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 23
// roots.js // Compute the real roots of a given quadratic// equation. If the roots are imaginary, this script// displays NaN, because that is what results from // taking the square root of a negative number
// Get the coefficients of the equation from the user
var a = prompt("What is the value of 'a'? \n", "");var b = prompt("What is the value of 'b'? \n", "");var c = prompt("What is the value of 'c'? \n", "");
// Compute the square root and denominator of the result
var root_part = Math.sqrt(b * b - 4.0 * a * c);var denom = 2.0 * a;
// Compute and display the two roots
var root1 = (-b + root_part) / denom;var root2 = (-b - root_part) / denom;document.write("The first root is: ", root1, "<br />");document.write("The second root is: ", root2, "<br />");
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 24
4.6 Control Statements
- Similar to C, Java, and C++- Compound statements are delimited by braces, but compound statements are not blocks
- Control expressions – three kinds
1. Primitive values - If it is a string, it is true unless it is empty or "0" - If it is a number, it is true unless it is zero
2. Relational Expressions - The usual six: ==, !=, <, >, <=, >=
- Operands are coerced if necessary - If one is a string and one is a number, it attempts to convert the string to a number - If one is Boolean and the other is not, the Boolean operand is coerced to a number (1 or 0)
- The unusual two: === and !== - Same as == and !=, except that no coercions are done (operands must be identical) E.g. ‘3’ === 3 evaluates to false
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 25
4.6 Control Statements (continued)
2. Relational Expressions (continued) - Comparisons of references to objects are not useful (addresses are compared, not values)
3. Compound Expressions
- The usual operators: &&, ||, and !
- The Boolean object has a method, toString, to allow them
to be printed (true or false)
- If a Boolean object is used in a conditional expression, it is false only if it is null or undefined
- Selection Statements
- The usual if-then-else (clauses can be either
single statements or compound statements)
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 26
4.6 Control Statements (continued)
- Switch
switch (expression) { case value_1: // value_1 statements case value_2: // value_2 statements … [default: // default statements] }
- The statements can be either statement sequences or compound statements
- The control expression can be a number, a string, or a Boolean
- Different cases can have values of different types
// borders2.js // An example of a switch statement for table border// size selection
var bordersize;bordersize = prompt("Select a table border size \n" + "0 (no border) \n" + "1 (1 pixel border) \n" + "4 (4 pixel border) \n" + "8 (8 pixel border) \n");
switch (bordersize) { case "0": document.write("<table>"); break; case "1": document.write("<table border = '1'>"); break; case "4": document.write("<table border = '4'>"); break; case "8": document.write("<table border = '8'>"); break; default: document.write("Error - invalid choice: ", bordersize, "<br />");}
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 27
Document.write("<caption> 2008 NFL Divisional", " Winners </caption>");document.write("<tr>", "<th />", "<th> American Conference </th>", "<th> National Conference </th>", "</tr>", "<tr>", "<th> East </th>", "<td> Miami Dolphins </td>", "<td> New York Giants </td>", "</tr>", "<tr>", "<th> North </th>", "<td> Pittsburgh Steelers </td>", "<td> Minnesota Vikings </td>", "</tr>", "<tr>", "<th> West </th>", "<td> San Diego Chargers </td>", "<td> Arizona Cardinals </td>", "</tr>", "<tr>", "<th> South </th>", "<td> Tennessee Titans </td>", "<td> Carolina Panthers </td>", "</tr>", "</table>");
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 28
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 29
4.6 Control Statements (continued)
- Loop statements
while (control_expression) statement or cmpnd
for (init; control; increment) statement or cmpnd
- init can have declarations, but the scope of such
variables is the whole script
do
statement or compound
while (control_expression)
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Object creation and Modification
• Objects are often created with a new expression,
which must include a call to a constructor
• new creates a blank object - one with no properties
– JavaScript objects do not have types
–The constructor both creates and initializes object properties. E.g., the following command creates an object with some inherited method properties, but no data properties:
var my_car = new Object();
–The following command creates a blank object and assigns two properties to the object:
var my_car = {make: “Ford”, model: “Contour”);
Object properties
• Created by assigning a value to a property’s namemy_car.make = “Ford”;
my_car.model = “Contour”;
my_car.engine = new Object(); -- Object nesting
my_car.engine.config = “V6”;
my_car.engine.hp = 200;
• Object properties are not variables - they are just names of values, used with object variables to access property values. E.g.: document.write(my_car.engine);
• The number of properties in a JavaScript object is dynamic - at any time during interpretation, properties can be added to or deleted from an object. delete(my_car.model);
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Accessing object properties
• A property can be accessed the same way it is assigned a value, namely with the object-dot-property notation
• Property names can be accessed also as if they were elements of an array:
for (identifier in object)
statement or compound for (var prop in my_car) document.write(“Name: ”, prop, “; Value:”, my_car[prop] + "<br />");
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Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 33
4.8 Arrays
- Objects with some special functionality
- Array elements can be primitive values or references to other objects
- Length is dynamic - the length property stores the length
- Array objects can be created in two ways, with new, or by assigning an
array literal
var myList = new Array(24, "bread", true); var myList2 = [24, "bread", true]; var myList3 = new Array(24);
- The length of an array is the highest subscript to which an element has
been assigned, plus 1
myList[122] = "bitsy"; // length is 123
- Because the length property is writeable, you can set it to make the
array any length you like, as in
myList.length = 150;
- Assigning a value to an element that does not exist creates that element
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 34
4.8 Arrays (continued)
- Array methods:
- join – converts all elements of an array to strings and
concatenates them into a single string e.g., var listStr = list.join(", ");
- reverse
- sort – e.g., names.sort();
- Coerces elements to strings and puts them in alphabetical order
- concat – catenates its actual parameters to the end of the array
object e.g., newList = list.concat(47, 26);
- slice - similar to substring for strings
listPart = list.slice(2, 5); listPart2 = list.slice(2);
- toString
- Coerce elements to strings, if necessary, and catenate them
together, separated by commas (exactly like join(", "))
- push, pop, unshift, and shift
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Variables
• Variables can be implicitly or explicitly declared:
– Variables declared with a var statement are explicitly declarared.
– Other variables are implicit.
• Scope of a variable: the range of statements over which the variable is visible.
• When JS is embedded in an XHTML document, the scope of a variable is the range of lines of the document over which the variable is visible.
–An implicitly declared variable has global scope, i.e. is visible in the entire XHTML document or JS file. This is true also for implicit variables defined inside a function definition.
–Variables explicitly declared inside a function have local scope.
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 36
4.9 Functions - function function_name([formal_parameters]) { -- body – }
- Return value is the parameter of return
- If there is no return, or if the end of the function is reached,
undefined is returned
- If return has no parameter, undefined is returned
- Functions are objects, so variables that reference them can be treated as other object references - If fun is the name of a function,
ref_fun = fun; ... ref_fun(); /* A call to fun */
- We place all function definitions in the head of the the XHTML document
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 37
4.9 Functions (continued)
- Parameters are passed by value, but when a reference variable is passed, the semantics are pass-by-reference
- There is no type checking of parameters, nor is the number of parameters checked (excess actual parameters are ignored, excess formal parameters are set to undefined)
- All parameters are sent through a property array, arguments, which has the length property
- There is no clean way to send a primitive by reference - One dirty way is to put the value in an array and send the array’s name
function by10(a) { a[0] *= 10; } ... var listx = new Array(1); ... listx[0] = x; by10(listx); x = listx[0];
function params(a, b) { document.write("Function params was passed ", arguments.length, " parameter(s) <br />"); document.write("Parameter values are: <br />");
for (var arg = 0; arg < arguments.length; arg++) document.write(arguments[arg], "<br />");
document.write("<br />"); } // A test driver for function params
params("Mozart"); params("Mozart", "Beethoven"); params("Mozart", "Beethoven", "Tchaikowsky");
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 38
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 39 Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 40
4.9 Functions (continued)
- To sort something other than strings into alphabetical order, write a function that performs the comparison and send it to the sort method
- The comparison function must return a negative number, zero, or a positive number to indicate whether the order is ok, equal, or not
function num_order(a, b) {return a - b;}
- Now, we can sort an array named num_list with:
num_list.sort(num_order);
function median(list) { list.sort(function (a, b) {return a - b;}); var list_len = list.length;
// Use the modulus operator to determine whether // the array's length is odd or even// Use Math.floor to truncate numbers// Use Math.round to round numbers
if ((list_len % 2) == 1) return list[Math.floor(list_len / 2)]; else return Math.round((list[list_len / 2 - 1] + list[list_len / 2]) / 2);} // end of function median
// Test drivervar my_list_1 = [8, 3, 9, 1, 4, 7];var my_list_2 = [10, -2, 0, 5, 3, 1, 7];var med = median(my_list_1); document.write("Median of [", my_list_1, "] is: ", med, "<br />");med = median(my_list_2);document.write("Median of [", my_list_2, "] is: ", med, "<br />");
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 41 Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 42
4.11 Constructors
- Used to create and initialize properties of newly created objects
function plane(newMake, newModel, newYear){ this.make = newMake; this.model = newModel; this.year = newYear; }
myPlane = new plane("Cessna", "Centurnian", "1970");
- Can also have method properties function displayPlane() { document.write("Make: ", this.make,"<br />"); document.write("Model: ", this.model, "<br />"); document.write("Year: ", this.year,"<br />"); } - Now add the following to the constructor: this.display = displayPlane;
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 43
4.12 Pattern Matching - JavaScript provides two ways to do pattern matching: 1. Using RegExp objects
2. Using methods on String objects
- Both ways use the same type of regular expressions, which are based on PERL- Patterns sent as parameters to pattern-matching methods are delimited with slashes: /RegExp/
- Simple patterns - Two categories of characters in patterns: a. normal characters (match themselves) b. metacharacters (can have special meanings in patterns--do not match themselves) \ | ( ) [ ] { } ^ $ * + ? .
- A metacharacter is treated as a normal character if it is backslashed - period is a special metacharacter - it matches any character
except newline
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 44
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
search(pattern)
- Returns the position in the object string of the pattern (position is relative to zero); returns -1 if it fails
var str = "Gluckenheimer"; var position = str.search(/n/); /* position is now 6 */
- Character classes
- Put a sequence of characters in brackets, and it defines a set of characters, any one of which matches
[abcd]
- Dashes can be used to specify spans of characters in a class [a-z]
- A caret at the left end of a class definition means the opposite
[^0-9]
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 45
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
- Character classes (continued) - Character class abbreviations Abbr. Equiv. Pattern Matches
\d [0-9] a digit \D [^0-9] not a digit \w [A-Za-z_0-9] a word character \W [^A-Za-z_0-9] not a word character \s [ \r\t\n\f] a whitespace character \S [^ \r\t\n\f] not a whitespace character
- Variables in patterns are interpolated
- Quantifiers
- Quantifiers in braces
Quantifier Meaning
{n} exactly n repetitions {m,} at least m repetitions {m, n} at least m but not more than n repetitions
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 46
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
- Quantifiers (continued)
- Other quantifiers (just abbreviations for the most commonly used quantifiers)
- * means zero or more repetitions e.g., \d* means zero or more digits
- + means one or more repetitions e.g., \d+ means one or more digits
- ? Means zero or one e.g., \d? means zero or one digit
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 47
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
- Anchors
- The pattern can be forced to match only at the left end with ^; at the end with $ e.g., /^Lee/ matches "Lee Ann" but not "Mary Lee Ann" /Lee Ann$/ matches "Mary Lee Ann", but not "Mary Lee Ann is nice"
- The anchor operators (^ and $) do not match characters in the string- they match positions, at the beginning or end
- Pattern modifiers
- The i modifier tells the matcher to ignore the case of letters
/oak/i matches "OAK" and "Oak"
- The x modifier tells the matcher to ignore whitespace in the pattern (allows comments in patterns)
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 48
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
- Other Pattern Matching Methods of String
replace(pattern, string)
- Finds a substring that matches the pattern and replaces it with the string (g modifier can be used)
var str = "Some rabbits are rabid"; str.replace(/rab/g, "tim");
str is now "Some timbits are timid" $1 and $2 are both set to "rab"
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 49
4.12 Pattern Matching (continued)
match(pattern)
- The most general pattern-matching method
- Returns an array of results of the pattern-matching operation
- With the g modifier, it returns an array of the substrings that
matched
- Without the g modifier, first element of the returned array has
the matched substring, the other elements have the values of
$1, …
var str = "My 3 kings beat your 2 aces"; var matches = str.match(/[ab]/g);
- matches is set to ["b", "a", "a"]
split(parameter)
"," and /,/ both work
" SHOW forms_check.js
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 50
4.13 Debugging JavaScript
- IE7
- Select Internet Options from the Tools menu
- Choose the Advanced tab
- Uncheck the Disable script debugging box
- Check the Display a notification about every script error box
- Now, a script error causes a small window to be opened with an explanation of the error
- FX2
- Select Tools and Error Console
- A small window appears to display script errors
- Remember to Clear the console after using an error message – avoids confusion
function tst_phone_num(num) {
// Use a simple pattern to check the number of digits and the dash var ok = num.search(/^\d{3}-\d{4}$/);
if (ok == 0) return true; else return false;
} // end of function tst_phone_num
// A script to test tst_phone_num
var tst = tst_phone_num("444-5432");if (tst) document.write("444-5432 is a valid phone no <br />");else document.write("Program error <br />");
tst = tst_phone_num("444-r432");if (tst) document.write("Program error <br />");else document.write("444-r432 is not a valid phone no <br />");
tst = tst_phone_num("44-1234");if (tst) document.write("Program error <br />");else document.write("44-1234 is not a valid phone no <br /");
Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 51 Chapter 4 © 2009 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. 52