General rules for object definitions:

  • Place the opening bracket on the same line as the object name.
  • Use colon plus one space between each property and its value.
  • Use quotes around string values, not around numeric values.
  • Do not add a comma after the last property-value pair.
  • Place the closing bracket on a new line, without leading spaces.
  • Always end an object definition with a semicolon.

Example

var person = {
  firstName: "John",
  lastName: "Doe",
  age: 50,
  eyeColor: "blue"
};

Short objects can be written compressed, on one line, using spaces only between properties, like this:

var person = {firstName:"John", lastName:"Doe", age:50, eyeColor:"blue"};

Line Length < 80

For readability, avoid lines longer than 80 characters.

If a JavaScript statement does not fit on one line, the best place to break it, is after an operator or a comma.

Example

document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML =
"Hello Dolly.";

Naming Conventions

Always use the same naming convention for all your code. For example:

  • Variable and function names written as camelCase
  • Global variables written in UPPERCASE (We don't, but it's quite common)
  • Constants (like PI) written in UPPERCASE

Should you use hyp-henscamelCase, or under_scores in variable names?

This is a question programmers often discuss. The answer depends on who you ask:

Hyphens in HTML and CSS:

HTML5 attributes can start with data- (data-quantity, data-price).

CSS uses hyphens in property-names (font-size).

Hyphens can be mistaken as subtraction attempts. Hyphens are not allowed in JavaScript names.

Underscores:

Many programmers prefer to use underscores (date_of_birth), especially in SQL databases.

Underscores are often used in PHP documentation.

PascalCase:

PascalCase is often preferred by C programmers.

camelCase:

camelCase is used by JavaScript itself, by jQuery, and other JavaScript libraries.

Do not start names with a $ sign. It will put you in conflict with many JavaScript library names.


Loading JavaScript in HTML

Use simple syntax for loading external scripts (the type attribute is not necessary):

<script src="myscript.js"></script>

Accessing HTML Elements

A consequence of using "untidy" HTML styles, might result in JavaScript errors.

These two JavaScript statements will produce different results:

var obj = getElementById("Demo")

var obj = getElementById("demo")

If possible, use the same naming convention (as JavaScript) in HTML.


File Extensions

HTML files should have a .html extension (.htm is allowed).

CSS files should have a .css extension.

JavaScript files should have a .js extension.


Use Lower Case File Names

Most web servers (Apache, Unix) are case sensitive about file names:

london.jpg cannot be accessed as London.jpg.

Other web servers (Microsoft, IIS) are not case sensitive:

london.jpg can be accessed as London.jpg or london.jpg.

If you use a mix of upper and lower case, you have to be extremely consistent.

If you move from a case insensitive, to a case sensitive server, even small errors can break your web site.

To avoid these problems, always use lower case file names (if possible).


Performance

Coding conventions are not used by computers. Most rules have little impact on the execution of programs.

Indentation and extra spaces are not significant in small scripts.

For code in development, readability should be preferred. Larger production scripts should be minified. 



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