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	| Author | SHA1 | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| e756865491 | |||
| 9125af6047 | 
| @ -26,16 +26,17 @@ | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // Imagine an apple, it's a "thing" that is an "apple", or we say that
 | ||||
| // it has a value "apple". There are lots of apples in the world, 
 | ||||
| // each one is different but all are apples. Now imagine two people, 
 | ||||
| // each looking at an apple, we can say that each person sees the value 
 | ||||
| // "apple", those values are equal, and if those people are sitting at 
 | ||||
| // the same table and looking at the same apple, we say that their 
 | ||||
| // apples are the same, or they are of the same identity, (i.e. the 
 | ||||
| // same apple).  
 | ||||
| // each one is slightly different but all are apples. Now imagine two 
 | ||||
| // people, each looking at an apple, we can say that each person sees
 | ||||
| // the value "apple", those values are equal, and if those people are
 | ||||
| // sitting at the same table and looking at the same apple, we say that 
 | ||||
| // their apples are the same apple, or in JavaScript-ish, they are of 
 | ||||
| // the same identity.  
 | ||||
| // Then if we can take a different set of people looking at apples, but 
 | ||||
| // now each one has their own personal apple, the values are still the 
 | ||||
| // same, both apples are still apples but now they are different apples, 
 | ||||
| // aren't they? And thus we say they are of different identities.
 | ||||
| // same, both apples are still looking at apples but now their apples 
 | ||||
| // are different, aren't they? And thus we say they are of different 
 | ||||
| // identities.
 | ||||
| // We'll come back to this concept a bit later, once we introduce 
 | ||||
| // JavaScript values and types.
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| @ -49,7 +50,7 @@ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // Note that all numbers are of the same "type", this is different to 
 | ||||
| // allot of other languages where numbers are represented closer to the 
 | ||||
| // allot of other languages where numbers are implemented closer to the 
 | ||||
| // low-level hardware implementation and thus are represented by a 
 | ||||
| // whole range of number types.
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| @ -58,12 +59,35 @@ | ||||
| 	var oct = 052 | ||||
| 	var hex = 0xFF | ||||
| 	var dec = 42 | ||||
| 	var exp = .42e2 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // But note that these are just different notations and all of the 
 | ||||
| // above resolve to the same number.
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // Numbers also have several limitations:
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // - precision, rounding errors and fractions (IEEE-754)
 | ||||
| 	0.1 + 0.2 == 0.3 // -> false
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| //   XXX
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // - large number rounding
 | ||||
| 	Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER + 10 - 10 == Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| //   In general numbers larger than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER and 
 | ||||
| //   smaller than Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER should not be used for 
 | ||||
| //   math operations (see BigInt).
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // Note that neither issue is specific to JavaScript but rather are 
 | ||||
| // side-effects of number implementations in modern computers and
 | ||||
| // the trade-offs of these implementation on each level from the 
 | ||||
| // CPU to the high-level languages.
 | ||||
| //
 | ||||
| // For more details see:
 | ||||
| // 	XXX
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // Strings
 | ||||
| 	var string = 'string' | ||||
| @ -75,10 +99,12 @@ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // XXX a note on template strings
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // Boolieans
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // Booleans
 | ||||
| 	var t = true | ||||
| 	var f = false | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| // Nulls
 | ||||
| 	var n = null | ||||
| 	var u = undefined | ||||
|  | ||||
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