Friday Freebies

Friday Freebie: O’REILLY Books!

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Nettuts+ has quickly established itself as one of the premier resources for web development tutorials. One year ago, this website didn’t exist. Today, we’ve surpassed 30,000 subscribers – which is no small feat! To show our appreciation, I have some more freebies to mail out this week, courtesy of O’REILLY. Additionally, I’d like to inform you of a fantastic Javascript workshop that’s coming up, hosted by Douglas Crockford.

What Must I Do?

To enter into the drawing, all you need to do is follow us on Twitter, if you aren’t already! Next, leave a comment containing your username for verification purposes. I’ll then randomly select a few people from this list and email you! It’s as simple as that.

Javascript: The Good Parts

Mastering Regular Expressions

Learning Javascript

Master Class With Douglas Crockford

Douglas Crockford
  • Location: Mission Bay Conference Center, San Francisco, CA
  • When: March 30th, 9-5

What will I learn?

  • Get a detailed look at JavaScript’s elegant features, including syntax, objects, functions, inheritance, arrays, regular expressions, and methods
  • Discover why object-oriented programming in classical, prototypal, and functional styles is unique to JavaScript
  • Understand the Document Object Model (DOM) — the web browser API so crucial to your work
  • Improve the quality of your JavaScript code through performance, security, and style
  • Learn how to avoid the bad parts of JavaScript, such as global variables and the eval function

About this class

Most programming languages contain good and bad parts, but JavaScript has more than its share of the bad, having been developed and then released in a hurry before it could be refined. Once Java applets failed, JavaScript became the language of the Web by default, making its popularity almost completely independent of its qualities as a programming language.

In this Master Class, JavaScript expert Douglas Crockford will scrape away the language’s bad features to reveal all the good ideas that make JavaScript an outstanding object-oriented programming language — ideas such as functions, loose typing, dynamic objects, and an expressive object literal notation. You’ll learn why this powerful feature subset is more reliable, readable, and maintainable than the language as a whole, and discover firsthand how to create extensible and efficient code with it. Based on his popular O’Reilly book, JavaScript: The Good Parts, this class will demonstrate how JavaScript can be a beautiful, elegant, lightweight, and highly expressive language.

Early bird registration ends March 22nd ($50 discount). Nettuts+ readers receive a 25% discount on top of that! Use the code “SPH25″ when registering.

 

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Discussion 760 Comments

Comment Page 15 of 15 1 ... 13 14 15
  1. Sam Yu says:

    @samuelyu

  2. Arend says:

    Hey guys,

    Thanx for the great site! Keep up the good work…

    my twitter: arondius

  3. Heather says:

    @saint_heather

    Javascript the Good Parts would fit nicely on my reference bookshelf when I’m not reading it!!

  4. Andrew Miesner says:

    aMies

  5. Autonomy says:

    @autonomydesign

  6. Hito says:

    Ho nice !!

    I want one :D

    And thx u guy for your great work :D

  7. domicius says:

    Thanks for the opportunity!
    As I’m just doing my best to learn JavaScript (got plenty of ideas for the webOS and Palm Pre ;) ) any of these books would come in handy. :)

    My twitter username: domicius

  8. Tony Adams says:

    @adams_at

  9. Neil Hurst says:

    Just starting following this great site – so much great info

    Tweeter: neilhu

  10. eddie says:

    @ahhqx

    thanks

  11. Giania says:

    Hi @nettuts! I’m @giania!

    Crossing my fingers for some sweet, sweet O’Reilly books. C’mooooon Regular Expressions.

  12. meatbagwtf says:

    @meatbag

    Thanks for this opportunity!

  13. Chris says:

    @cshuknecht

  14. so… who finally won this??? does anyone know?

  15. Michael Dennis says:

    Nice!

  16. Paul Rak says:

    @paulrak

    Good luck to all!

  17. Michael says:

    @nomadhacker

    Thanks!

  18. Joe Reynolds says:

    @dapanther

    Thanks…

  19. Viktor says:

    kelemen_viktor

  20. the_brainy_bug says:

    @the_brainy_bug

  21. Jan says:

    @artjunkie500

    love the site!

  22. AFEWS says:

    I believe that O’Reilly has done for tech what slicing did for bread.

  23. Phil W. says:

    @philwilson

  24. Ds says:

    @daljits

    its cool.

  25. DJ says:

    @pixelMauler

  26. Dave says:

    twitter name: firewolfsblog

  27. Adam Krogh says:

    Love the site, and I can always use some new books!

    @kroghy

  28. Oh, please count me in @stevecostello

  29. MuseMediaLab says:

    @musemedialab

  30. p says:

    i’m with you ;)
    my twitter id: puur09

  31. Josip Bachmann-Vlahovic says:

    @josipbv

    really nice stuff!

  32. Kevin says:

    Twitter name is Jatoskep

  33. Katy says:

    @paralegrrl

  34. Mamun says:

    username: mamunabms

    Thnx for this initiative.

  35. Patrice says:

    Nice way to have many followers :) Ill follow for sure

  36. Nice, great collection of books. Twitter name is @ckuijjer or http://twitter.com/ckuijjer

  37. Royatl says:

    Oh well, two weeks late, but here I am

    @royatl

  38. Oliver says:

    @marcooda

  39. LiliekS says:

    oh i love freebies :D

    @lilieks

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