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README.md
前端面试手册
这是什么?
与典型的软件工程师面试不同,前端面试对算法的重视比较低。面试会更多的考查错综复杂的前端知识,像HTML、CSS、JavaScript的相关知识。
虽然现在有一些资料,可以帮助前端开发者准备面试,但是远不如软件工程师那么丰富。目前为止,最有用的前端面试资料是前端开发者面试问题集。但是,有相当一部分问题,我在网上找不到完整满意的答案。因此,我在这里试着回答这些问题。这是一个开源项目,希望随着社区广泛参与,得到更多的支持。
在找常规的面试材料?
那你可能对技术面试手册感兴趣,它对常规面试很有帮助,包含算法、性格行为等一系列问题。另外,里面还有一份面试锦囊!
目录
DOCTYPE有什么用?- 如何提供包含多种语言内容的页面?
- 在设计开发多语言网站时,需要留心哪些事情?
- 什么是
data-属性? - 将 HTML5 看作成开放的网络平台,什么是 HTML5 的基本构件(building block)?
- 请描述
cookie、sessionStorage和localStorage的区别。 - 请描述
<script>、<script async>和<script defer>的区别。 - Why is it generally a good idea to position CSS
<link>s between<head></head>and JS<script>s just before</body>? Do you know any exceptions? - What is progressive rendering?
- Why you would use a
srcsetattribute in an image tag? Explain the process the browser uses when evaluating the content of this attribute. - Have you used different HTML templating languages before?
- What is CSS selector specificity and how does it work?
- What's the difference between "resetting" and "normalizing" CSS? Which would you choose, and why?
- Describe
floats and how they work. - Describe z-index and how stacking context is formed.
- Describe BFC (Block Formatting Context) and how it works.
- What are the various clearing techniques and which is appropriate for what context?
- Explain CSS sprites, and how you would implement them on a page or site.
- How would you approach fixing browser-specific styling issues?
- How do you serve your pages for feature-constrained browsers? What techniques/processes do you use?
- What are the different ways to visually hide content (and make it available only for screen readers)?
- Have you ever used a grid system, and if so, what do you prefer?
- Have you used or implemented media queries or mobile specific layouts/CSS?
- Are you familiar with styling SVG?
- Can you give an example of an @media property other than screen?
- What are some of the "gotchas" for writing efficient CSS?
- What are the advantages/disadvantages of using CSS preprocessors?
- Describe what you like and dislike about the CSS preprocessors you have used.
- How would you implement a web design comp that uses non-standard fonts?
- Explain how a browser determines what elements match a CSS selector.
- Describe pseudo-elements and discuss what they are used for.
- Explain your understanding of the box model and how you would tell the browser in CSS to render your layout in different box models.
- What does
* { box-sizing: border-box; }do? What are its advantages? - What is the CSS
displayproperty and can you give a few examples of its use? - What's the difference between
inlineandinline-block? - What's the difference between a
relative,fixed,absoluteandstatically positioned element? - What existing CSS frameworks have you used locally, or in production? How would you change/improve them?
- Have you played around with the new CSS Flexbox or Grid specs?
- Can you explain the difference between coding a web site to be responsive versus using a mobile-first strategy?
- Have you ever worked with retina graphics? If so, when and what techniques did you use?
- Is there any reason you'd want to use
translate()instead ofabsolutepositioning, or vice-versa? And why?
- Explain event delegation
- Explain how
thisworks in JavaScript - Explain how prototypal inheritance works
- What do you think of AMD vs CommonJS?
- Explain why the following doesn't work as an IIFE:
function foo(){ }();. What needs to be changed to properly make it an IIFE? - What's the difference between a variable that is:
null,undefinedor undeclared? How would you go about checking for any of these states? - What is a closure, and how/why would you use one?
- Can you describe the main difference between a
.forEachloop and a.map()loop and why you would pick one versus the other? - What's a typical use case for anonymous functions?
- How do you organize your code? (module pattern, classical inheritance?)
- What's the difference between host objects and native objects?
- Difference between: function
Person(){},var person = Person(), andvar person = new Person()? - What's the difference between
.calland.apply? - Explain
Function.prototype.bind. - When would you use
document.write()? - What's the difference between feature detection, feature inference, and using the UA string?
- Explain Ajax in as much detail as possible.
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of using Ajax?
- Explain how JSONP works (and how it's not really Ajax).
- Have you ever used JavaScript templating? If so, what libraries have you used?
- Explain "hoisting".
- Describe event bubbling.
- What's the difference between an "attribute" and a "property"?
- Why is extending built-in JavaScript objects not a good idea?
- Difference between document
loadevent and documentDOMContentLoadedevent? - What is the difference between
==and===? - Explain the same-origin policy with regards to JavaScript.
- Make this work:
duplicate([1,2,3,4,5]); // [1,2,3,4,5,1,2,3,4,5] - Why is it called a Ternary expression, what does the word "Ternary" indicate?
- What is "use strict";? what are the advantages and disadvantages to using it?
- Create a for loop that iterates up to 100 while outputting "fizz" at multiples of 3, "buzz" at multiples of 5 and "fizzbuzz" at multiples of 3 and 5
- Why is it, in general, a good idea to leave the global scope of a website as-is and never touch it?
- Why would you use something like the
loadevent? Does this event have disadvantages? Do you know any alternatives, and why would you use those? - Explain what a single page app is and how to make one SEO-friendly.
- What is the extent of your experience with Promises and/or their polyfills?
- What are the pros and cons of using Promises instead of callbacks?
- What are some of the advantages/disadvantages of writing JavaScript code in a language that compiles to JavaScript?
- What tools and techniques do you use debugging JavaScript code?
- What language constructions do you use for iterating over object properties and array items?
- Explain the difference between mutable and immutable objects.
- Explain the difference between synchronous and asynchronous functions.
- What is event loop? What is the difference between call stack and task queue?
- Explain the differences on the usage of
foobetweenfunction foo() {}andvar foo = function() {} - What are the differences between variables created using
let,varorconst? - What are the differences between ES6 class and ES5 function constructors?
- Can you offer a use case for the new arrow => function syntax? How does this new syntax differ from other functions?
- What advantage is there for using the arrow syntax for a method in a constructor?
- What is the definition of a higher-order function?
- Can you give an example for destructuring an object or an array?
- ES6 Template Literals offer a lot of flexibility in generating strings, can you give an example?
- Can you give an example of a curry function and why this syntax offers an advantage?
- What are the benefits of using spread syntax and how is it different from rest syntax?
- How can you share code between files?
- Why you might want to create static class members?
HTML 问题
本章节是前端开发者面试问题- HTML 部分的答案。 欢迎提出 PR 进行建议和指正!
DOCTYPE有什么用?
DOCTYPE是“document type”的缩写。它是 HTML 中用来区分标准模式和怪异模式的声明,用来告知浏览器使用标准模式渲染页面。
从中获得的启发:在页面开始处添加<!DOCTYPE html>即可。
参考
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7695044/what-does-doctype-html-do
- https://www.w3.org/QA/Tips/Doctype
- https://quirks.spec.whatwg.org/#history
如何提供包含多种语言内容的页面?
这个问题有点问得含糊其辞,我认为这是在询问最常见的情况:如何提供包含多种语言内容的页面,并保证页面内容语言的一致性。
当客户端向服务器发送 HTTP 请求时,通常会发送有关语言首选项的信息,比如使用Accept-Language请求头。如果替换语言存在,服务器可以利用该信息返回与之相匹配的 HTML 文档。返回的 HTML 文档还应在<html>标签中声明lang属性,比如<html lang="en">...</html>
在后台中,HTML 将包含i18n占位符和待以替换的内容,这些按照不同语言,以 YML 或 JSON 格式存储。然后,服务器将动态生成指定语言内容的 HTML 页面。整个过程通常需要借助后台框架实现。
参考
在设计开发多语言网站时,需要留心哪些事情?
- 在 HTML 中使用
lang属性。 - 引导用户切换到自己的母语——让用户能够轻松地切换到自己的国家或语言,而不用麻烦。
- 在图片中展示文本会阻碍网站规模增长——把文本放在图片中展示,仍然是一种非常流行的方式。这样做可以在所有终端上,都能显示出美观的非系统字体。然而,为了翻译图片中的文本,需要为每种语言单独创建对应的图片,这种做法很容易在图片数量不断增长的过程中失控。
- 限制词语或句子的长度——网页内容在使用其他语言表述时,文字长度会发生变化。设计时,需要警惕文字长度溢出布局的问题,最好不要使用受文字长度影响较大的设计。比如标题、标签、按钮的设计,往往很受文字长度影响,这些设计中的文字与正文或评论部分不同,一般不可以自由换行。
- 注意颜色的使用——颜色在不同的语言和文化中,意义和感受是不同的。设计时应该使用恰当的颜色。
- 日期和货币的格式化——日期在不同的国家和地区,会以不同的方式显示。比如美国的日期格式是“May 31, 2012”,而在欧洲部分地区,日期格式是“31 May 2012”。
- 不要使用连接的翻译字符串——不要做类似这样的事情,比如
“今天的日期是”+具体日期。这样做可能会打乱其他语言的语序。替代方案是,为每种语言编写带变量替换的模版字符串。请看下面两个分别用英语和中文表示的句子:I will travel on {% date %}和{% date %} 我会出发。可以看到,语言的语法规则不同,变量的位置是不同的。 - 注意语言阅读的方向——在英语中,文字是从左向右阅读的;而在传统日语中,文字是从右向左阅读的。
参考
什么是data-属性?
在 JavaScript 框架变得流行之前,前端开发者经常使用data-属性,把额外数据存储在 DOM 自身中。当时没有其他 Hack 手段(比如使用非标准属性或 DOM 上额外属性)。这样做是为了将自定义数据存储到页面或应用中,对此没有其他更适当的属性或元素。
而现在,不鼓励使用data-属性。原因之一是,用户可以通过在浏览器中利用检查元素,轻松地修改属性值,借此修改数据。数据模型最好存储在 JavaScript 本身中,并利用框架提供的数据绑定,使之与 DOM 保持更新。
参考
- http://html5doctor.com/html5-custom-data-attributes/
- https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/dom.html#embedding-custom-non-visible-data-with-the-data-*-attributes
将 HTML5 看作成开放的网络平台,什么是 HTML5 的基本构件(building block)?
- 语义 - 提供更准确地描述内容。
- 连接 - 提供新的方式与服务器通信。
- 离线和存储 - 允许网页在本地存储数据并有效地离线运行。
- 多媒体 - 在 Open Web 中,视频和音频被视为一等公民(first-class citizens)。
- 2D/3D 图形和特效 - 提供更多种演示选项。
- 性能和集成 - 提供更快的访问速度和性能更好的计算机硬件。
- 设备访问 - 允许使用各种输入、输出设备。
- 外观 - 可以开发丰富的主题。
参考
请描述cookie、sessionStorage和localStorage的区别。
上面提到的技术名词,都是在客户端以键值对存储的存储机制,并且只能将值存储为字符串。
cookie |
localStorage |
sessionStorage |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| 由谁初始化 | 客户端或服务器,服务器可以使用Set-Cookie请求头。 |
客户端 | 客户端 |
| 过期时间 | 手动设置 | 永不过期 | 当前页面关闭时 |
| 在当前浏览器会话(browser sessions)中是否保持不变 | 取决于是否设置了过期时间 | 是 | 否 |
| 是否与域名(domain)相关联 | 是 | 否 | 否 |
| 是否随着每个 HTTP 请求发送给服务器 | 是,Cookies 会通过Cookie请求头,自动发送给服务器 |
否 | 否 |
| 容量(每个域名) | 4kb | 5MB | 5MB |
| 访问权限 | 任意窗口 | 任意窗口 | 当前页面窗口 |
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Cookies
- http://tutorial.techaltum.com/local-and-session-storage.html
请描述<script>、<script async>和<script defer>的区别。
<script>- HTML 解析中断,脚本被提取并立即执行。执行结束后,HTML 解析继续。<script async>- 脚本的提取、执行的过程与HTML解析过程并行,脚本执行完毕可能在HTML解析完毕之前。当脚本与页面上其他脚本独立时,可以使用async,比如用作页面统计分析。<script defer>- 脚本仅提取过程与HTML解析过程并行,脚本的执行将在HTML解析完毕后进行。如果有多个含defer的脚本,脚本的执行顺序将按照在 document 中出现的位置,从上到下顺序执行。
注意:没有src属性的脚本,async和defer属性会被忽略。
参考
- http://www.growingwiththeweb.com/2014/02/async-vs-defer-attributes.html
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10808109/script-tag-async-defer
- https://bitsofco.de/async-vs-defer/
Why is it generally a good idea to position CSS <link>s between <head></head> and JS <script>s just before </body>? Do you know any exceptions?
Placing <link>s in the <head>
Putting <link>s in the head is part of the specification. Besides that, placing at the top allows the page to render progressively which improves user experience. The problem with putting stylesheets near the bottom of the document is that it prohibits progressive rendering in many browsers, including Internet Explorer. Some browsers block rendering to avoid having to repaint elements of the page if their styles change. The user is stuck viewing a blank white page. It prevents the flash of unstyled contents.
Placing <script>s just before </body>
<script>s block HTML parsing while they are being downloaded and executed. Downloading the scripts at the bottom will allow the HTML to be parsed and displayed to the user first.
An exception for positioning of <script>s at the bottom is when your script contains document.write(), but these days it's not a good practice to use document.write(). Also, placing <script>s at the bottom means that the browser cannot start downloading the scripts until the entire document is parsed. One possible workaround is to put <script> in the <head> and use the defer attribute.
参考
What is progressive rendering?
Progressive rendering is the name given to techniques used to improve performance of a webpage (in particular, improve perceived load time) to render content for display as quickly as possible.
It used to be much more prevalent in the days before broadband internet but it is still useful in modern development as mobile data connections are becoming increasingly popular (and unreliable)!
Examples of such techniques:
- Lazy loading of images - Images on the page are not loaded all at once. JavaScript will be used to load an image when the user scrolls into the part of the page that displays the image.
- Prioritizing visible content (or above-the-fold rendering) - Include only the minimum CSS/content/scripts necessary for the amount of page that would be rendered in the users browser first to display as quickly as possible, you can then use deferred scripts or listen for the
DOMContentLoaded/loadevent to load in other resources and content. - Async HTML fragments - Flushing parts of the HTML to the browser as the page is constructed on the back end. More details on the technique can be found here.
Why you would use a srcset attribute in an image tag? Explain the process the browser uses when evaluating the content of this attribute.
TODO
参考
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33651166/what-is-progressive-rendering
- http://www.ebaytechblog.com/2014/12/08/async-fragments-rediscovering-progressive-html-rendering-with-marko/
Have you used different HTML templating languages before?
Yes, Pug (formerly Jade), ERB, Slim, Handlebars, Jinja, Liquid, just to name a few. In my opinion, they are more or less the same and provide similar functionality of escaping content and helpful filters for manipulating the data to be displayed. Most templating engines will also allow you to inject your own filters in the event you need custom processing before display.
其他答案
- https://neal.codes/blog/front-end-interview-questions-html/
- http://peterdoes.it/2015/12/03/a-personal-exercise-front-end-job-interview-questions-and-my-answers-all/
CSS Questions
Answers to Front-end Job Interview Questions - CSS Questions. Pull requests for suggestions and corrections are welcome!
What is CSS selector specificity and how does it work?
The browser determines what styles to show on an element depending on the specificity of CSS rules. We assume that the browser has already determined the rules that match a particular element. Among the matching rules, the specificity, four comma-separate values, a, b, c, d are calculated for each rule based on the following:
ais whether inline styles are being used. If the property declaration is an inline style on the element,ais 1, else 0.bis the number of ID selectors.cis the number of classes, attributes and pseudo-classes selectors.dis the number of tags and pseudo-elements selectors.
The resulting specificity is not a score, but a matrix of values that can be compared column by column. When comparing selectors to determine which has the highest specificity, look from left to right, and compare the highest value in each column. So a value in column b will override values in columns c and d, no matter what they might be. As such, specificity of 0,1,0,0 would be greater than one of 0,0,10,10.
In the cases of equal specificity: the latest rule is the one that counts. If you have written the same rule into your style sheet (regardless of internal or external) twice, then the lower rule in your style sheet is closer to the element to be styled, it is deemed to be more specific and therefore will be applied.
I would write CSS rules with low specificity so that they can be easily overridden if necessary. When writing CSS UI component library code, it is important that they have low specificities so that users of the library can override them without using too complicated CSS rules just for the sake of increasing specificity or resorting to !important.
参考
- https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/07/css-specificity-things-you-should-know/
- https://www.sitepoint.com/web-foundations/specificity/
What's the difference between "resetting" and "normalizing" CSS? Which would you choose, and why?
- Resetting - Resetting is meant to strip all default browser styling on elements. For e.g.
margins,paddings,font-sizes of all elements are reset to be the same. You will have to redeclare styling for common typographic elements. - Normalizing - Normalizing preserves useful default styles rather than "unstyling" everything. It also corrects bugs for common browser dependencies.
I would choose resetting when I have a very customized or unconventional site design such that I need to do a lot of my own styling and do not need any default styling to be preserved.
参考
Describe floats and how they work.
Float is a CSS positioning property. Floated elements remain a part of the flow of the page, and will affect the positioning of other elements (e.g. text will flow around floated elements), unlike position: absolute elements, which are removed from the flow of the page.
The CSS clear property can be used to be positioned below left/right/both floated elements.
If a parent element contains nothing but floated elements, its height will be collapsed to nothing. It can be fixed by clearing the float after the floated elements in the container but before the close of the container.
The .clearfix hack uses a clever CSS pseudo selector (:after) to clear floats. Rather than setting the overflow on the parent, you apply an additional class clearfix to it. Then apply this CSS:
.clearfix:after {
content: " ";
visibility: hidden;
display: block;
height: 0;
clear: both;
}
Alternatively, give overflow: auto or overflow: hidden property to the parent element which will establish a new block formatting context inside the children and it will expand to contain its children.
参考
Describe z-index and how stacking context is formed.
The z-index property in CSS controls the vertical stacking order of elements that overlap. z-index only affects elements that have a position value which is not static.
Without any z-index value, elements stack in the order that they appear in the DOM (the lowest one down at the same hierarchy level appears on top). Elements with non-static positioning (and their children) will always appear on top of elements with default static positioning, regardless of HTML hierarchy.
A stacking context is an element that contains a set of layers. Within a local stacking context, the z-index values of its children are set relative to that element rather than to the document root. Layers outside of that context — i.e. sibling elements of a local stacking context — can't sit between layers within it. If an element B sits on top of element A, a child element of element A, element C, can never be higher than element B even if element C has a higher z-index than element B.
Each stacking context is self-contained - after the element's contents are stacked, the whole element is considered in the stacking order of the parent stacking context. A handful of CSS properties trigger a new stacking context, such as opacity less than 1, filter that is not none, and transform that is notnone.
参考
- https://css-tricks.com/almanac/properties/z/z-index/
- https://philipwalton.com/articles/what-no-one-told-you-about-z-index/
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_Positioning/Understanding_z_index/The_stacking_context
Describe Block Formatting Context (BFC) and how it works.
A Block Formatting Context (BFC) is part of the visual CSS rendering of a web page in which block boxes are laid out. Floats, absolutely positioned elements, inline-blocks, table-cells, table-captions, and elements with overflow other than visible (except when that value has been propagated to the viewport) establish new block formatting contexts.
A BFC is an HTML box that satisfies at least one of the following conditions:
- The value of
floatis notnone. - The value of
positionis neitherstaticnorrelative. - The value of
displayistable-cell,table-caption,inline-block,flex, orinline-flex. - The value of
overflowis notvisible.
In a BFC, each box's left outer edge touches the left edge of the containing block (for right-to-left formatting, right edges touch).
Vertical margins between adjacent block-level boxes in a BFC collapse. Read more on collapsing margins.
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/CSS/Block_formatting_context
- https://www.sitepoint.com/understanding-block-formatting-contexts-in-css/
What are the various clearing techniques and which is appropriate for what context?
- Empty
divmethod -<div style="clear:both;"></div>. - Clearfix method - Refer to the
.clearfixclass above. overflow: autooroverflow: hiddenmethod - Parent will establish a new block formatting context and expand to contains its floated children.
In large projects, I would write a utility .clearfix class and use them in places where I need it. overflow: hidden might clip children if the children is taller than the parent and is not very ideal.
Explain CSS sprites, and how you would implement them on a page or site.
CSS sprites combine multiple images into one single larger image. It is commonly used technique for icons (Gmail uses it). How to implement it:
- Use a sprite generator that packs multiple images into one and generate the appropriate CSS for it.
- Each image would have a corresponding CSS class with
background-image,background-positionandbackground-sizeproperties defined. - To use that image, add the corresponding class to your element.
Advantages:
- Reduce the number of HTTP requests for multiple images (only one single request is required per spritesheet). But with HTTP2, loading multiple images is no longer much of an issue.
- Advance downloading of assets that won't be downloaded until needed, such as images that only appear upon
:hoverpseudo-states. Blinking wouldn't be seen.
参考
How would you approach fixing browser-specific styling issues?
- After identifying the issue and the offending browser, use a separate style sheet that only loads when that specific browser is being used. This technique requires server-side rendering though.
- Use libraries like Bootstrap that already handles these styling issues for you.
- Use
autoprefixerto automatically add vendor prefixes to your code. - Use Reset CSS or Normalize.css.
How do you serve your pages for feature-constrained browsers? What techniques/processes do you use?
- Graceful degradation - The practice of building an application for modern browsers while ensuring it remains functional in older browsers.
- Progressive enhancement - The practice of building an application for a base level of user experience, but adding functional enhancements when a browser supports it.
- Use caniuse.com to check for feature support.
- Autoprefixer for automatic vendor prefix insertion.
- Feature detection using Modernizr.
What are the different ways to visually hide content (and make it available only for screen readers)?
These techniques are related to accessibility (a11y).
visibility: hidden. However the element is still in the flow of the page, and still takes up space.width: 0; height: 0. Make the element not take up any space on the screen at all, resulting in not showing it.position: absolute; left: -99999px. Position it outside of the screen.text-indent: -9999px. This only works on text within theblockelements.- Metadata. For example by using Schema.org, RDF and JSON-LD.
- WAI-ARIA. A W3C technical specification that specifies how to increase the accessibility of web pages.
Even if WAI-ARIA is the ideal solution, I would go with the absolute positioning approach, as it has the least caveats, works for most elements and it's an easy technique.
参考
- https://www.w3.org/TR/wai-aria-1.1/
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/ARIA
- http://a11yproject.com/
Have you ever used a grid system, and if so, what do you prefer?
I like the float-based grid system because it still has the most browser support among the alternative existing systems (flex, grid). It has been used in Bootstrap for years and has been proven to work.
Have you used or implemented media queries or mobile-specific layouts/CSS?
Yes. An example would be transforming a stacked pill navigation into a fixed-bottom tab navigation beyond a certain breakpoint.
Are you familiar with styling SVG?
No... Sadly.
Can you give an example of an @media property other than screen?
TODO
What are some of the "gotchas" for writing efficient CSS?
Firstly, understand that browsers match selectors from rightmost (key selector) to left. Browsers filter out elements in the DOM according to the key selector, and traverse up its parent elements to determine matches. The shorter the length of the selector chain, the faster the browser can determine if that element matches the selector. Hence avoid key selectors that are tag and universal selectors. They match a large numbers of elements and browsers will have to do more work in determining if the parents do match.
BEM (Block Element Modifier) methodology recommends that everything has a single class, and, where you need hierarchy, that gets baked into the name of the class as well, this naturally makes the selector efficient and easy to override.
Be aware of which CSS properties trigger reflow, repaint and compositing. Avoid writing styles that change the layout (trigger reflow) where possible.
参考
What are the advantages/disadvantages of using CSS preprocessors?
Advantages:
- CSS is made more maintainable.
- Easy to write nested selectors.
- Variables for consistent theming. Can share theme files across different projects.
- Mixins to generate repeated CSS.
- Splitting your code into multiple files. CSS files can be split up too but doing so will require a HTTP request to download each CSS file.
Disadvantages:
- Requires tools for preprocessing. Re-compilation time can be slow.
Describe what you like and dislike about the CSS preprocessors you have used.
Likes:
- Mostly the advantages mentioned above.
- Less is written in JavaScript, which plays well with Node.
Dislikes:
- I use Sass via
node-sass, which is a binding for LibSass written in C++. I have to frequently recompile it when switching between node versions. - In Less, variable names are prefixed with
@, which can be confused with native CSS keywords like@media,@importand@font-facerule.
How would you implement a web design comp that uses non-standard fonts?
Use @font-face and define font-family for different font-weights.
Explain how a browser determines what elements match a CSS selector.
This part is related to the above about writing efficient CSS. Browsers match selectors from rightmost (key selector) to left. Browsers filter out elements in the DOM according to the key selector, and traverse up its parent elements to determine matches. The shorter the length of the selector chain, the faster the browser can determine if that element matches the selector.
For example with this selector p span, browsers firstly find all the <span> elements, and traverse up its parent all the way up to the root to find the <p> element. For a particular <span>, as soon as it finds a <p>, it knows that the <span> matches and can stop its matching.
参考
Describe pseudo-elements and discuss what they are used for.
A CSS pseudo-element is a keyword added to a selector that lets you style a specific part of the selected element(s). They can be used for decoration (:first-line, :first-letter) or adding elements to the markup (combined with content: ...) without having to modify the markup (:before, :after).
:first-lineand:first-lettercan be used to decorate text.- Used in the
.clearfixhack as shown above to add a zero-space element withclear: both. - Triangular arrows in tooltips use
:beforeand:after. Encourages separation of concerns because the triangle is considered part of styling and not really the DOM. It's not really possible to draw a triangle with just CSS styles without using an additional HTML element.
参考
Explain your understanding of the box model and how you would tell the browser in CSS to render your layout in different box models.
The CSS box model describes the rectangular boxes that are generated for elements in the document tree and laid out according to the visual formatting model. Each box has a content area (e.g. text, an image, etc.) and optional surrounding padding, border, and margin areas.
The CSS box model is responsible for calculating:
- How much space a block element takes up.
- Whether or not borders and/or margins overlap, or collapse.
- A box's dimensions.
The box model has the following rules:
- The dimensions of a block element are calculated by
width,height,padding,borders, andmargins. - If no
heightis specified, a block element will be as high as the content it contains, pluspadding(unless there are floats, for which see below). - If no
widthis specified, a non-floated block element will expand to fit the width of its parent minuspadding. - The
heightof an element is calculated by the content'sheight. - The
widthof an element is calculated by the content'swidth. - By default,
paddings andborders are not part of thewidthandheightof an element.
参考
What does * { box-sizing: border-box; } do? What are its advantages?
- By default, elements have
box-sizing: content-boxapplied, and only the content size is being accounted for. box-sizing: border-boxchanges how thewidthandheightof elements are being calculated,borderandpaddingare also being included in the calculation.- The
heightof an element is now calculated by the content'sheight+ verticalpadding+ verticalborderwidth. - The
widthof an element is now calculated by the content'swidth+ horizontalpadding+ horizontalborderwidth.
What is the CSS display property and can you give a few examples of its use?
none,block,inline,inline-block,table,table-row,table-cell,list-item.
TODO
What's the difference between inline and inline-block?
I shall throw in a comparison with block for good measure.
block |
inline-block |
inline |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Size | Fills up the width of its parent container. | Depends on content. | Depends on content. |
| Positioning | Start on a new line and tolerates no HTML elements next to it (except when you add float) |
Flows along with other content and allows other elements beside. | Flows along with other content and allows other elements beside. |
Can specify width and height |
Yes | Yes | No. Will ignore if being set. |
Can be aligned with vertical-align |
No | Yes | Yes |
| Margins and paddings | All sides respected. | All sides respected. | Only horizontal sides respected. Vertical sides, if specified, do not affect layout. Vertical space it takes up depends on line-height, even though the border and padding appear visually around the content. |
| Float | - | - | Becomes like a block element where you can set vertical margins and paddings. |
What's the difference between a relative, fixed, absolute and statically positioned element?
A positioned element is an element whose computed position property is either relative, absolute, fixed or sticky.
static- The default position; the element will flow into the page as it normally would. Thetop,right,bottom,leftandz-indexproperties do not apply.relative- The element's position is adjusted relative to itself, without changing layout (and thus leaving a gap for the element where it would have been had it not been positioned).absolute- The element is removed from the flow of the page and positioned at a specified position relative to its closest positioned ancestor if any, or otherwise relative to the initial containing block. Absolutely positioned boxes can have margins, and they do not collapse with any other margins. These elements do not affect the position of other elements.fixed- The element is removed from the flow of the page and positioned at a specified position relative to the viewport and doesn't move when scrolled.sticky- Sticky positioning is a hybrid of relative and fixed positioning. The element is treated asrelativepositioned until it crosses a specified threshold, at which point it is treated asfixedpositioned.
参考
What existing CSS frameworks have you used locally, or in production? How would you change/improve them?
- Bootstrap - Slow release cycle. Bootstrap 4 has been in alpha for almost 2 years. Add a spinner button component, as it is widely-used.
- Semantic UI - Source code structure makes theme customization extremely hard to understand. Painful to customize with unconventional theming system. Hardcoded config path within the vendor library. Not well-designed for overriding variables unlike in Bootstrap.
- Bulma - A lot of non-semantic and superfluous classes and markup required. Not backward compatible. Upgrading versions breaks the app in subtle manners.
Have you played around with the new CSS Flexbox or Grid specs?
Yes. Flexbox is mainly meant for 1-dimensional layouts while Grid is meant for 2-dimensional layouts.
Flexbox solves many common problems in CSS, such as vertical centering of elements within a container, sticky footer, etc. Bootstrap and Bulma are based on Flexbox, and it is probably the recommended way to create layouts these days. Have tried Flexbox before but ran into some browser incompatibility issues (Safari) in using flex-grow, and I had to rewrite my code using inline-blocks and math to calculate the widths in percentages, it wasn't a nice experience.
Grid is by far the most intuitive approach for creating grid-based layouts (it better be!) but browser support is not wide at the moment.
参考
Can you explain the difference between coding a web site to be responsive versus using a mobile-first strategy?
TODO
How is responsive design different from adaptive design?
Both responsive and adaptive design attempt to optimize the user experience across different devices, adjusting for different viewport sizes, resolutions, usage contexts, control mechanisms, and so on.
Responsive design works on the principle of flexibility - a single fluid website that can look good on any device. Responsive websites use media queries, flexible grids, and responsive images to create a user experience that flexes and changes based on a multitude of factors. Like a single ball growing or shrinking to fit through several different hoops.
Adaptive design is more like the modern definition of progressive enhancement. Instead of one flexible design, adaptive design detects the device and other features, and then provides the appropriate feature and layout based on a predefined set of viewport sizes and other characteristics. The site detects the type of device used, and delivers the pre-set layout for that device. Instead of a single ball going through several different-sized hoops, you'd have several different balls to use depending on the hoop size.
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Archive/Apps/Design/UI_layout_basics/Responsive_design_versus_adaptive_design
- http://mediumwell.com/responsive-adaptive-mobile/
- https://css-tricks.com/the-difference-between-responsive-and-adaptive-design/
Have you ever worked with retina graphics? If so, when and what techniques did you use?
I tend to use higher resolution graphics (twice the display size) to handle retina display. The better way would be to use a media query like @media only screen and (min-device-pixel-ratio: 2) { ... } and change the background-image.
For icons, I would also opt to use svgs and icon fonts where possible, as they render very crisply regardless of resolution.
Another method would be to use JavaScript to replace the <img> src attribute with higher resolution versions after checking the window.devicePixelRatio value.
参考
Is there any reason you'd want to use translate() instead of absolute positioning, or vice-versa? And why?
translate() is a value of CSS transform. Changing transform or opacity does not trigger browser reflow or repaint, only compositions, whereas changing the absolute positioning triggers reflow. transform causes the browser to create a GPU layer for the element but changing absolute positioning properties uses the CPU. Hence translate() is more efficient and will result in shorter paint times for smoother animations.
When using translate(), the element still takes up its original space (sort of like position: relative), unlike in changing the absolute positioning.
参考
Other Answers
- https://neal.codes/blog/front-end-interview-css-questions
- https://quizlet.com/28293152/front-end-interview-questions-css-flash-cards/
- http://peterdoes.it/2015/12/03/a-personal-exercise-front-end-job-interview-questions-and-my-answers-all/
JS Questions
Answers to Front-end Job Interview Questions - JS Questions. Pull requests for suggestions and corrections are welcome!
Explain event delegation
Event delegation is a technique involving adding event listeners to a parent element instead of adding them to the descendant elements. The listener will fire whenever the event is triggered on the descendant elements due to event bubbling up the DOM. The benefits of this technique are:
- Memory footprint goes down because only one single handler is needed on the parent element, rather than having to attach event handlers on each descendant.
- There is no need to unbind the handler from elements that are removed and to bind the event for new elements.
参考
- https://davidwalsh.name/event-delegate
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1687296/what-is-dom-event-delegation
Explain how this works in JavaScript
There's no simple explanation for this; it is one of the most confusing concepts in JavaScript. A hand-wavey explanation is that the value of this depends on how the function is called. I have read many explanations on this online, and I found Arnav Aggrawal's explanation to be the clearest. The following rules are applied:
- If the
newkeyword is used when calling the function,thisinside the function is a brand new object. - If
apply,call, orbindare used to call/create a function,thisinside the function is the object that is passed in as the argument. - If a function is called as a method, such as
obj.method()—thisis the object that the function is a property of. - If a function is invoked as a free function invocation, meaning it was invoked without any of the conditions present above,
thisis the global object. In a browser, it is thewindowobject. If in strict mode ('use strict'),thiswill beundefinedinstead of the global object. - If multiple of the above rules apply, the rule that is higher wins and will set the
thisvalue. - If the function is an ES2015 arrow function, it ignores all the rules above and receives the
thisvalue of its surrounding scope at the time it is created.
For an in-depth explanation, do check out his article on Medium.
参考
- https://codeburst.io/the-simple-rules-to-this-in-javascript-35d97f31bde3
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/3127440/1751946
Explain how prototypal inheritance works
This is an extremely common JavaScript interview question. All JavaScript objects have a prototype property, that is a reference to another object. When a property is accessed on an object and if the property is not found on that object, the JavaScript engine looks at the object's prototype, and the prototype's prototype and so on, until it finds the property defined on one of the prototypes or until it reaches the end of the prototype chain. This behaviour simulates classical inheritance, but it is really more of delegation than inheritance.
参考
- https://www.quora.com/What-is-prototypal-inheritance/answer/Kyle-Simpson
- https://davidwalsh.name/javascript-objects
What do you think of AMD vs CommonJS?
Both are ways to implement a module system, which was not natively present in JavaScript until ES2015 came along. CommonJS is synchronous while AMD (Asynchronous Module Definition) is obviously asynchronous. CommonJS is designed with server-side development in mind while AMD, with its support for asynchronous loading of modules, is more intended for browsers.
I find AMD syntax to be quite verbose and CommonJS is closer to the style you would write import statements in other languages. Most of the time, I find AMD unnecessary, because if you served all your JavaScript into one concatenated bundle file, you wouldn't benefit from the async loading properties. Also, CommonJS syntax is closer to Node style of writing modules and there is less context-switching overhead when switching between client side and server side JavaScript development.
I'm glad that with ES2015 modules, that has support for both synchronous and asynchronous loading, we can finally just stick to one approach. Although it hasn't been fully rolled out in browsers and in Node, we can always use transpilers to convert our code.
参考
- https://auth0.com/blog/javascript-module-systems-showdown/
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16521471/relation-between-commonjs-amd-and-requirejs
Explain why the following doesn't work as an IIFE: function foo(){ }();. What needs to be changed to properly make it an IIFE?
IIFE stands for Immediately Invoked Function Expressions. The JavaScript parser reads function foo(){ }(); as function foo(){ } and ();, where the former is a function declaration and the latter (a pair of brackets) is an attempt at calling a function but there is no name specified, hence it throws Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token ).
Here are two ways to fix it that involves adding more brackets: (function foo(){ })() and (function foo(){ }()). These functions are not exposed in the global scope and you can even omit its name if you do not need to reference itself within the body.
参考
What's the difference between a variable that is: null, undefined or undeclared? How would you go about checking for any of these states?
Undeclared variables are created when you assign a value to an identifier that is not previously created using var, let or const. Undeclared variables will be defined globally, outside of the current scope. In strict mode, a ReferenceError will be thrown when you try to assign to an undeclared variable. Undeclared variables are bad just like how global variables are bad. Avoid them at all cost! To check for them, wrap its usage in a try/catch block.
function foo() {
x = 1; // Throws a ReferenceError in strict mode
}
foo();
console.log(x); // 1
A variable that is undefined is a variable that has been declared, but not assigned a value. It is of type undefined. If a function does not return any value as the result of executing it is assigned to a variable, the variable also has the value of undefined. To check for it, compare using the strict equality (===) operator or typeof which will give the 'undefined' string. Note that you should not be using the abstract equality operator to check, as it will also return true if the value is null.
var foo;
console.log(foo); // undefined
console.log(foo === undefined); // true
console.log(typeof foo === "undefined"); // true
console.log(foo == null); // true. Wrong, don't use this to check!
function bar() {}
var baz = bar();
console.log(baz); // undefined
A variable that is null will have been explicitly assigned to the null value. It represents no value and is different from undefined in the sense that it has been explicitly assigned. To check for null, simply compare using the strict equality operator. Note that like the above, you should not be using the abstract equality operator (==) to check, as it will also return true if the value is undefined.
var foo = null;
console.log(foo === null); // true
console.log(foo == undefined); // true. Wrong, don't use this to check!
As a personal habit, I never leave my variables undeclared or unassigned. I will explicitly assign null to them after declaring, if I don't intend to use it yet.
参考
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15985875/effect-of-declared-and-undeclared-variables
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/undefined
What is a closure, and how/why would you use one?
A closure is the combination of a function and the lexical environment within which that function was declared. The word "lexical" refers to the fact that lexical scoping uses the location where a variable is declared within the source code to determine where that variable is available. Closures are functions that have access to the outer (enclosing) function's variables—scope chain even after the outer function has returned.
Why would you use one?
- Data privacy / emulating private methods with closures. Commonly used in the module pattern.
- Partial applications or currying.
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Closures
- https://medium.com/javascript-scene/master-the-javascript-interview-what-is-a-closure-b2f0d2152b36
Can you describe the main difference between a .forEach loop and a .map() loop and why you would pick one versus the other?
To understand the differences between the two, let's look at what each function does.
forEach
- Iterates through the elements in an array.
- Executes a callback for each element.
- Does not return a value.
const a = [1, 2, 3];
const doubled = a.forEach((num, index) => {
// Do something with num and/or index.
});
// doubled = undefined
map
- Iterates through the elements in an array.
- "Maps" each element to a new element by calling the function on each element, creating a new array as a result.
const a = [1, 2, 3];
const doubled = a.map(num => {
return num * 2;
});
// doubled = [2, 4, 6]
The main difference between .forEach and .map() is that .map() returns a new array. If you need the result, but do not wish to mutate the original array, .map() is the clear choice. If you simply need to iterate over an array, forEach is a fine choice.
参考
What's a typical use case for anonymous functions?
They can be used in IIFEs to encapsulate some code within a local scope so that variables declared in it do not leak to the global scope.
(function() {
// Some code here.
})();
As a callback that is used once and does not need to be used anywhere else. The code will seem more self-contained and readable when handlers are defined right inside the code calling them, rather than having to search elsewhere to find the function body.
setTimeout(function() {
console.log("Hello world!");
}, 1000);
Arguments to functional programming constructs or Lodash (similar to callbacks).
const arr = [1, 2, 3];
const double = arr.map(function(el) {
return el * 2;
});
console.log(double); // [2, 4, 6]
参考
- https://www.quora.com/What-is-a-typical-usecase-for-anonymous-functions
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10273185/what-are-the-benefits-to-using-anonymous-functions-instead-of-named-functions-fo
How do you organize your code? (module pattern, classical inheritance?)
In the past, I used Backbone for my models which encourages a more OOP approach, creating Backbone models and attaching methods to them.
The module pattern is still great, but these days, I use the Flux architecture based on React/Redux which encourages a single-directional functional programming approach instead. I would represent my app's models using plain objects and write utility pure functions to manipulate these objects. State is manipulated using actions and reducers like in any other Redux application.
I avoid using classical inheritance where possible. When and if I do, I stick to these rules.
What's the difference between host objects and native objects?
Native objects are objects that are part of the JavaScript language defined by the ECMAScript specification, such as String, Math, RegExp, Object, Function, etc.
Host objects are provided by the runtime environment (browser or Node), such as window, XMLHTTPRequest, etc.
参考
Difference between: function Person(){}, var person = Person(), and var person = new Person()?
This question is pretty vague. My best guess at its intention is that it is asking about constructors in JavaScript. Technically speaking, function Person(){} is just a normal function declaration. The convention is use PascalCase for functions that are intended to be used as constructors.
var person = Person() invokes the Person as a function, and not as a constructor. Invoking as such is a common mistake if it the function is intended to be used as a constructor. Typically, the constructor does not return anything, hence invoking the constructor like a normal function will return undefined and that gets assigned to the variable intended as the instance.
var person = new Person() creates an instance of the Person object using the new operator, which inherits from Person.prototype. An alternative would be to use Object.create, such as: Object.create(Person.prototype).
function Person(name) {
this.name = name;
}
var person = Person("John");
console.log(person); // undefined
console.log(person.name); // Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'name' of undefined
var person = new Person("John");
console.log(person); // Person { name: "John" }
console.log(person.name); // "john"
参考
What's the difference between .call and .apply?
Both .call and .apply are used to invoke functions and the first parameter will be used as the value of this within the function. However, .call takes in a comma-separated arguments as the next arguments while .apply takes in an array of arguments as the next argument. An easy way to remember this is C for call and comma-separated and A for apply and array of arguments.
function add(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
console.log(add.call(null, 1, 2)); // 3
console.log(add.apply(null, [1, 2])); // 3
Explain Function.prototype.bind.
Taken word-for-word from MDN:
The
bind()method creates a new function that, when called, has its this keyword set to the provided value, with a given sequence of arguments preceding any provided when the new function is called.
In my experience, it is most useful for binding the value of this in methods of classes that you want to pass into other functions. This is frequently done in React components.
参考
When would you use document.write()?
document.write() writes a string of text to a document stream opened by document.open(). When document.write() is executed after the page has loaded, it will call document.open which clears the whole document (<head> and <body> removed!) and replaces the contents with the given parameter value in string. Hence it is usually considered dangerous and prone to misuse.
There are some answers online that explain document.write() is being used in analytics code or when you want to include styles that should only work if JavaScript is enabled. It is even being used in HTML5 boilerplate to load scripts in parallel and preserve execution order! However, I suspect those reasons might be outdated and in the modern day, they can be achieved without using document.write(). Please do correct me if I'm wrong about this.
参考
- https://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2005/06/three_javascrip_1.html
- https://github.com/h5bp/html5-boilerplate/wiki/Script-Loading-Techniques#documentwrite-script-tag
What's the difference between feature detection, feature inference, and using the UA string?
Feature Detection
Feature detection involves working out whether a browser supports a certain block of code, and running different code dependent on whether it does (or doesn't), so that the browser can always provide a working experience rather crashing/erroring in some browsers. For example:
if ("geolocation" in navigator) {
// Can use navigator.geolocation
} else {
// Handle lack of feature
}
Modernizr is a great library to handle feature detection.
Feature Inference
Feature inference checks for a feature just like feature detection, but uses another function because it assumes it will also exist, e.g.:
if (document.getElementsByTagName) {
element = document.getElementById(id);
}
This is not really recommended. Feature detection is more foolproof.
UA String
This is a browser-reported string that allows the network protocol peers to identify the application type, operating system, software vendor or software version of the requesting software user agent. It can be accessed via navigator.userAgent. However, the string is tricky to parse and can be spoofed. For example, Chrome reports both as Chrome and Safari. So to detect Safari you have to check for the Safari string and the absence of the Chrome string. Avoid this method.
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/Tools_and_testing/Cross_browser_testing/Feature_detection
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20104930/whats-the-difference-between-feature-detection-feature-inference-and-using-th
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Browser_detection_using_the_user_agent
Explain Ajax in as much detail as possible.
Ajax (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a set of web development techniques using many web technologies on the client side to create asynchronous web applications. With Ajax, web applications can send data to and retrieve from a server asynchronously (in the background) without interfering with the display and behavior of the existing page. By decoupling the data interchange layer from the presentation layer, Ajax allows for web pages, and by extension web applications, to change content dynamically without the need to reload the entire page. In practice, modern implementations commonly substitute JSON for XML due to the advantages of being native to JavaScript.
The XMLHttpRequest API is frequently used for the asynchronous communication or these days, the fetch API.
参考
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using Ajax?
Advantages
- Better interactivity. New content from the server can be changed dynamically without the need to reload the entire page.
- Reduce connections to the server since scripts and stylesheets only have to be requested once.
- State can be maintained on a page. JavaScript variables and DOM state will persist because the main container page was not reloaded.
- Basically most of the advantages of an SPA.
Disadvantages
- Dynamic webpages are harder to bookmark.
- Does not work if JavaScript has been disabled in the browser.
- Some webcrawlers do not execute JavaScript and would not see content that has been loaded by JavaScript.
- Basically most of the disadvantages of an SPA.
Explain how JSONP works (and how it's not really Ajax).
JSONP (JSON with Padding) is a method commonly used to bypass the cross-domain policies in web browsers because Ajax requests from the current page to a cross-origin domain is not allowed.
JSONP works by making a request to a cross-origin domain via a <script> tag and usually with a callback query parameter, for example: https://example.com?callback=printData. The server will then wrap the data within a function called printData and return it to the client.
<!-- https://mydomain.com -->
<script>
function printData(data) {
console.log(`My name is ${data.name}!`);
}
</script>
<script src="https://example.com?callback=printData"></script>
// File loaded from https://example.com?callback=printData
printData({ name: "Yang Shun" });
The client has to have the printData function in its global scope and the function will be executed by the client when the response from the cross-origin domain is received.
JSONP can be unsafe and has some security implications. As JSONP is really JavaScript, it can do everything else JavaScript can do, so you need to trust the provider of the JSONP data.
These days, CORS is the recommended approach and JSONP is seen as a hack.
参考
Have you ever used JavaScript templating? If so, what libraries have you used?
Yes. Handlebars, Underscore, Lodash, AngularJS and JSX. I disliked templating in AngularJS because it made heavy use of strings in the directives and typos would go uncaught. JSX is my new favourite as it is closer to JavaScript and there is barely any syntax to learn. Nowadays, you can even use ES2015 template string literals as a quick way for creating templates without relying on third-party code.
const template = `<div>My name is: ${name}</div>`;
However, do be aware of a potential XSS in the above approach as the contents are not escaped for you, unlike in templating libraries.
Explain "hoisting".
Hoisting is a term used to explain the behavior of variable declarations in your code. Variables declared or initialized with the var keyword will have their declaration "hoisted" up to the top of the current scope. However, only the declaration is hoisted, the assignment (if there is one), will stay where it is. Let's explain with a few examples.
// var declarations are hoisted.
console.log(foo); // undefined
var foo = 1;
console.log(foo); // 1
// let/const declarations are NOT hoisted.
console.log(bar); // ReferenceError: bar is not defined
let bar = 2;
console.log(bar); // 2
Function declarations have the body hoisted while the function expressions (written in the form of variable declarations) only has the variable declaration hoisted.
// Function Declaration
console.log(foo); // [Function: foo]
foo(); // 'FOOOOO'
function foo() {
console.log("FOOOOO");
}
console.log(foo); // [Function: foo]
// Function Expression
console.log(bar); // undefined
bar(); // Uncaught TypeError: bar is not a function
var bar = function() {
console.log("BARRRR");
};
console.log(bar); // [Function: bar]
Describe event bubbling.
When an event triggers on a DOM element, it will attempt to handle the event if there is a listener attached, then the event is bubbled up to its parent and the same thing happens. This bubbling occurs up the element's ancestors all the way to the document. Event bubbling is the mechanism behind event delegation.
What's the difference between an "attribute" and a "property"?
Attributes are defined on the HTML markup but properties are defined on the DOM. To illustrate the difference, imagine we have this text field in our HTML: <input type="text" value="Hello">.
const input = document.querySelector("input");
console.log(input.getAttribute("value")); // Hello
console.log(input.value); // Hello
But after you change the value of the text field by adding "World!" to it, this becomes:
console.log(input.getAttribute("value")); // Hello
console.log(input.value); // Hello World!
参考
Why is extending built-in JavaScript objects not a good idea?
Extending a built-in/native JavaScript object means adding properties/functions to its prototype. While this may seem like a good idea at first, it is dangerous in practice. Imagine your code uses a few libraries that both extend the Array.prototype by adding the same contains method, the implementations will overwrite each other and your code will break if the behavior of these two methods are not the same.
The only time you may want to extend a native object is when you want to create a polyfill, essentially providing your own implementation for a method that is part of the JavaScript specification but might not exist in the user's browser due to it being an older browser.
参考
Difference between document load event and document DOMContentLoaded event?
The DOMContentLoaded event is fired when the initial HTML document has been completely loaded and parsed, without waiting for stylesheets, images, and subframes to finish loading.
window's load event is only fired after the DOM and all dependent resources and assets have loaded.
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/DOMContentLoaded
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/load
What is the difference between == and ===?
== is the abstract equality operator while === is the strict equality operator. The == operator will compare for equality after doing any necessary type conversions. The === operator will not do type conversion, so if two values are not the same type === will simply return false. When using ==, funky things can happen, such as:
1 == "1"; // true
1 == [1]; // true
1 == true; // true
0 == ""; // true
0 == "0"; // true
0 == false; // true
My advice is never to use the == operator, except for convenience when comparing against null or undefined, where a == null will return true if a is null or undefined.
var a = null;
console.log(a == null); // true
console.log(a == undefined); // true
参考
Explain the same-origin policy with regards to JavaScript.
The same-origin policy prevents JavaScript from making requests across domain boundaries. An origin is defined as a combination of URI scheme, hostname, and port number. This policy prevents a malicious script on one page from obtaining access to sensitive data on another web page through that page's Document Object Model.
参考
Make this work:
duplicate([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]); // [1,2,3,4,5,1,2,3,4,5]
function duplicate(arr) {
return arr.concat(arr);
}
duplicate([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]); // [1,2,3,4,5,1,2,3,4,5]
Why is it called a Ternary expression, what does the word "Ternary" indicate?
"Ternary" indicates three, and a ternary expression accepts three operands, the test condition, the "then" expression and the "else" expression. Ternary expressions are not specific to JavaScript and I'm not sure why it is even in this list.
参考
What is "use strict";? What are the advantages and disadvantages to using it?
'use strict' is a statement used to enable strict mode to entire scripts or individual functions. Strict mode is a way to opt in to a restricted variant of JavaScript.
Advantages:
- Makes it impossible to accidentally create global variables.
- Makes assignments which would otherwise silently fail to throw an exception.
- Makes attempts to delete undeletable properties throw (where before the attempt would simply have no effect).
- Requires that function parameter names be unique.
thisis undefined in the global context.- It catches some common coding bloopers, throwing exceptions.
- It disables features that are confusing or poorly thought out.
Disadvantages:
- Many missing features that some developers might be used to.
- No more access to
function.callerandfunction.arguments. - Concatenation of scripts written in different strict modes might cause issues.
Overall, I think the benefits outweigh the disadvantages, and I never had to rely on the features that strict mode blocks. I would recommend using strict mode.
参考
Create a for loop that iterates up to 100 while outputting "fizz" at multiples of 3, "buzz" at multiples of 5 and "fizzbuzz" at multiples of 3 and 5.
Check out this version of FizzBuzz by Paul Irish.
for (let i = 1; i <= 100; i++) {
let f = i % 3 == 0,
b = i % 5 == 0;
console.log(f ? (b ? "FizzBuzz" : "Fizz") : b ? "Buzz" : i);
}
I would not advise you to write the above during interviews though. Just stick with the long but clear approach. For more wacky versions of FizzBuzz, check out the reference link below.
参考
Why is it, in general, a good idea to leave the global scope of a website as-is and never touch it?
Every script has access to the global scope, and if everyone is using the global namespace to define their own variables, there will bound to be collisions. Use the module pattern (IIFEs) to encapsulate your variables within a local namespace.
Why would you use something like the load event? Does this event have disadvantages? Do you know any alternatives, and why would you use those?
The load event fires at the end of the document loading process. At this point, all of the objects in the document are in the DOM, and all the images, scripts, links and sub-frames have finished loading.
The DOM event DOMContentLoaded will fire after the DOM for the page has been constructed, but do not wait for other resources to finish loading. This is preferred in certain cases when you do not need the full page to be loaded before initializing.
TODO.
参考
Explain what a single page app is and how to make one SEO-friendly.
The below is taken from the awesome Grab Front End Guide, which coincidentally, is written by me!
Web developers these days refer to the products they build as web apps, rather than websites. While there is no strict difference between the two terms, web apps tend to be highly interactive and dynamic, allowing the user to perform actions and receive a response for their action. Traditionally, the browser receives HTML from the server and renders it. When the user navigates to another URL, a full-page refresh is required and the server sends fresh new HTML for the new page. This is called server-side rendering.
However in modern SPAs, client-side rendering is used instead. The browser loads the initial page from the server, along with the scripts (frameworks, libraries, app code) and stylesheets required for the whole app. When the user navigates to other pages, a page refresh is not triggered. The URL of the page is updated via the HTML5 History API. New data required for the new page, usually in JSON format, is retrieved by the browser via AJAX requests to the server. The SPA then dynamically updates the page with the data via JavaScript, which it has already downloaded in the initial page load. This model is similar to how native mobile apps work.
The benefits:
- The app feels more responsive and users do not see the flash between page navigations due to full-page refreshes.
- Fewer HTTP requests are made to the server, as the same assets do not have to be downloaded again for each page load.
- Clear separation of the concerns between the client and the server; you can easily build new clients for different platforms (e.g. mobile, chatbots, smart watches) without having to modify the server code. You can also modify the technology stack on the client and server independently, as long as the API contract is not broken.
The downsides:
- Heavier initial page load due to loading of framework, app code, and assets required for multiple pages.
- There's an additional step to be done on your server which is to configure it to route all requests to a single entry point and allow client-side routing to take over from there.
- SPAs are reliant on JavaScript to render content, but not all search engines execute JavaScript during crawling, and they may see empty content on your page. This inadvertently hurts the Search Engine Optimization (SEO) of your app. However, most of the time, when you are building apps, SEO is not the most important factor, as not all the content needs to be indexable by search engines. To overcome this, you can either server-side render your app or use services such as Prerender to "render your javascript in a browser, save the static HTML, and return that to the crawlers".
参考
- https://github.com/grab/front-end-guide#single-page-apps-spas
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21862054/single-page-app-advantages-and-disadvantages
- http://blog.isquaredsoftware.com/presentations/2016-10-revolution-of-web-dev/
- https://medium.freecodecamp.com/heres-why-client-side-rendering-won-46a349fadb52
What is the extent of your experience with Promises and/or their polyfills?
Possess working knowledge of it. A promise is an object that may produce a single value some time in the future: either a resolved value, or a reason that it's not resolved (e.g., a network error occurred). A promise may be in one of 3 possible states: fulfilled, rejected, or pending. Promise users can attach callbacks to handle the fulfilled value or the reason for rejection.
Some common polyfills are $.deferred, Q and Bluebird but not all of them comply to the specification. ES2015 supports Promises out of the box and polyfills are typically not needed these days.
参考
What are the pros and cons of using Promises instead of callbacks?
Pros
- Avoid callback hell which can be unreadable.
- Makes it easy to write sequential asynchronous code that is readable with
.then(). - Makes it easy to write parallel asynchronous code with
Promise.all().
Cons
- Slightly more complex code (debatable).
- In older browsers where ES2015 is not supported, you need to load a polyfill in order to use it.
What are some of the advantages/disadvantages of writing JavaScript code in a language that compiles to JavaScript?
Some examples of languages that compile to JavaScript include CoffeeScript, Elm, ClojureScript, PureScript and TypeScript.
Advantages:
- Fixes some of the longstanding problems in JavaScript and discourages JavaScript anti-patterns.
- Enables you to write shorter code, by providing some syntactic sugar on top of JavaScript, which I think ES5 lacks, but ES2015 is awesome.
- Static types are awesome (in the case of TypeScript) for large projects that need to be maintained over time.
Disadvantages:
- Require a build/compile process as browsers only run JavaScript and your code will need to be compiled into JavaScript before being served to browsers.
- Debugging can be a pain if your source maps do not map nicely to your pre-compiled source.
- Most developers are not familiar with these languages and will need to learn it. There's a ramp up cost involved for your team if you use it for your projects.
- Smaller community (depends on the language), which means resources, tutorials, libraries and tooling would be harder to find.
- IDE/editor support might be lacking.
- These languages will always be behind the latest JavaScript standard.
- Developers should be cognizant of what their code is being compiled to — because that is what would actually be running, and that is what matters in the end.
Practically, ES2015 has vastly improved JavaScript and made it much nicer to write. I don't really see the need for CoffeeScript these days.
参考
What tools and techniques do you use for debugging JavaScript code?
- React and Redux
- JavaScript
- Chrome Devtools
debuggerstatement- Good old
console.logdebugging
参考
- https://hackernoon.com/twelve-fancy-chrome-devtools-tips-dc1e39d10d9d
- https://raygun.com/blog/javascript-debugging/
What language constructions do you use for iterating over object properties and array items?
For objects:
forloops -for (var property in obj) { console.log(property); }. However, this will also iterate through its inherited properties, and you will add anobj.hasOwnProperty(property)check before using it.Object.keys()-Object.keys(obj).forEach(function (property) { ... }).Object.keys()is a static method that will lists all enumerable properties of the object that you pass it.Object.getOwnPropertyNames()-Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj).forEach(function (property) { ... }).Object.getOwnPropertyNames()is a static method that will lists all enumerable and non-enumerable properties of the object that you pass it.
For arrays:
forloops -for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++). The common pitfall here is thatvaris in the function scope and not the block scope and most of the time you would want block scoped iterator variable. ES2015 introducesletwhich has block scope and it is recommended to use that instead. So this becomes:for (let i = 0; i < arr.length; i++).forEach-arr.forEach(function (el, index) { ... }). This construct can be more convenient at times because you do not have to use theindexif all you need is the array elements. There are also theeveryandsomemethods which will allow you to terminate the iteration early.
Most of the time, I would prefer the .forEach method, but it really depends on what you are trying to do. for loops allow more flexibility, such as prematurely terminate the loop using break or incrementing the iterator more than once per loop.
Explain the difference between mutable and immutable objects.
- What is an example of an immutable object in JavaScript?
- What are the pros and cons of immutability?
- How can you achieve immutability in your own code?
TODO
Explain the difference between synchronous and asynchronous functions.
Synchronous functions are blocking while asynchronous functions are not. In synchronous functions, statements complete before the next statement is run. In this case the program is evaluated exactly in order of the statements and execution of the program is paused if one of the statements take a very long time.
Asynchronous functions usually accept a callback as a parameter and execution continues on the next line immediately after the asynchronous function is invoked. The callback is only invoked when the asynchronous operation is complete and the call stack is empty. Heavy duty operations such as loading data from a web server or querying a database should be done asynchronously so that the main thread can continue executing other operations instead of blocking until that long operation to complete (in the case of browsers, the UI will freeze).
What is event loop? What is the difference between call stack and task queue?
The event loop is a single-threaded loop that monitors the call stack and checks if there is any work to be done in the task queue. If the call stack is empty and there are callback functions in the task queue, a function is dequeued and pushed onto the call stack to be executed.
If you haven't already checked out Philip Robert's talk on the Event Loop, you should. It is one of the most viewed videos on JavaScript.
参考
- https://2014.jsconf.eu/speakers/philip-roberts-what-the-heck-is-the-event-loop-anyway.html
- http://theproactiveprogrammer.com/javascript/the-javascript-event-loop-a-stack-and-a-queue/
Explain the differences on the usage of foo between function foo() {} and var foo = function() {}
The former is a function declaration while the latter is a function expression. The key difference is that function declarations have its body hoisted but the bodies of function expressions are not (they have the same hoisting behaviour as variables). For more explanation on hoisting, refer to the question above on hoisting. If you try to invoke a function expression before it is defined, you will get an Uncaught TypeError: XXX is not a function error.
Function Declaration
foo(); // 'FOOOOO'
function foo() {
console.log("FOOOOO");
}
Function Expression
foo(); // Uncaught TypeError: foo is not a function
var foo = function() {
console.log("FOOOOO");
};
参考
What are the differences between variables created using let, var or const?
Variables declared using the var keyword are scoped to the function in which they are created, or if created outside of any function, to the global object. let and const are block scoped, meaning they are only accessible within the nearest set of curly braces (function, if-else block, or for-loop).
function foo() {
// All variables are accessible within functions.
var bar = "bar";
let baz = "baz";
const qux = "qux";
console.log(bar); // bar
console.log(baz); // baz
console.log(qux); // qux
}
console.log(bar); // ReferenceError: bar is not defined
console.log(baz); // ReferenceError: baz is not defined
console.log(qux); // ReferenceError: qux is not defined
if (true) {
var bar = "bar";
let baz = "baz";
const qux = "qux";
}
// var declared variables are accessible anywhere in the function scope.
console.log(bar); // bar
// let and const defined variables are not accessible outside of the block they were defined in.
console.log(baz); // ReferenceError: baz is not defined
console.log(qux); // ReferenceError: qux is not defined
var allows variables to be hoisted, meaning they can be referenced in code before they are declared. let and const will not allow this, instead throwing an error.
console.log(foo); // undefined
var foo = "foo";
console.log(baz); // ReferenceError: can't access lexical declaration 'baz' before initialization
let baz = "baz";
console.log(bar); // ReferenceError: can't access lexical declaration 'bar' before initialization
const bar = "bar";
Redeclaring a variable with var will not throw an error, but 'let' and 'const' will.
var foo = "foo";
var foo = "bar";
console.log(foo); // "bar"
let baz = "baz";
let baz = "qux"; // Uncaught SyntaxError: Identifier 'baz' has already been declared
let and const differ in that let allows reassigning the variable's value while const does not.
// This is fine.
let foo = "foo";
foo = "bar";
// This causes an exception.
const baz = "baz";
baz = "qux";
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/let
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/var
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/const
What are the differences between ES6 class and ES5 function constructors?
TODO
Can you offer a use case for the new arrow => function syntax? How does this new syntax differ from other functions?
TODO
What advantage is there for using the arrow syntax for a method in a constructor?
TODO
What is the definition of a higher-order function?
A higher-order function is any function that takes one or more functions as arguments, which it uses to operate on some data, and/or returns a function as a result. Higher-order functions are meant to abstract some operation that is performed repeatedly. The classic example of this is map, which takes an array and a function as arguments. map then uses this function to transform each item in the array, returning a new array with the transformed data. Other popular examples in JavaScript are forEach, filter, and reduce. A higher-order function doesn't just need to be manipulating arrays as there are many use cases for returning a function from another function. Array.prototype.bind is one such example in JavaScript.
Map
Let say we have an array of names which we need to transform each string to uppercase.
const names = ["irish", "daisy", "anna"];
The imperative way will be as such:
const transformNamesToUppercase = function(names) {
const results = [];
for (let i = 0; i < names.length; i++) {
results.push(names[i].toUpperCase());
}
return results;
};
transformNamesToUppercase(names); // ['IRISH', 'DAISY', 'ANNA']
Use .map(transformerFn) makes the code shorter and more declarative.
const transformNamesToUppercase = function(names) {
return names.map(name => name.toUpperCase());
};
transformNamesToUppercase(names); // ['IRISH', 'DAISY', 'ANNA']
参考
- https://medium.com/javascript-scene/higher-order-functions-composing-software-5365cf2cbe99
- https://hackernoon.com/effective-functional-javascript-first-class-and-higher-order-functions-713fde8df50a
- https://eloquentjavascript.net/05_higher_order.html
Can you give an example for destructuring an object or an array?
Destructuring is an expression available in ES6 which enables a succinct and convenient way to extract values of Objects or Arrays, and place them into distinct variables.
Array destructuring
// Variable assignment.
const foo = ["one", "two", "three"];
const [one, two, three] = foo;
console.log(one); // "one"
console.log(two); // "two"
console.log(three); // "three"
// Swapping variables
let a = 1;
let b = 3;
[a, b] = [b, a];
console.log(a); // 3
console.log(b); // 1
Object destructuring
// Variable assignment.
const o = { p: 42, q: true };
const { p, q } = o;
console.log(p); // 42
console.log(q); // true
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Destructuring_assignment
- https://ponyfoo.com/articles/es6-destructuring-in-depth
ES6 Template Literals offer a lot of flexibility in generating strings, can you give an example?
TODO
Can you give an example of a curry function and why this syntax offers an advantage?
Currying is a pattern where a function with more than one parameter is broken into multiple functions that, when called in series, will accumulate all of the required parameters one at a time. This technique can be useful for making code written in a functional style easier to read and compose. It's important to note that for a function to be curried, it needs to start out as one function, then broken out into a sequence of functions that each take one parameter.
function curry(fn) {
if (fn.length === 0) {
return fn;
}
function _curried(depth, args) {
return function(newArgument) {
if (depth - 1 === 0) {
return fn(...args, newArgument);
}
return _curried(depth - 1, [...args, newArgument]);
};
}
return _curried(fn.length, []);
}
function add(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
var curriedAdd = curry(add);
var addFive = curriedAdd(5);
var result = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(addFive); // [5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
参考
What are the benefits of using spread syntax and how is it different from rest syntax?
ES6's spread syntax is very useful when coding in a functional paradigm as we can easily create copies of arrays or objects without resorting to Object.create, slice, or a library function. This language feature is used often in Redux and rx.js projects.
function putDookieInAnyArray(arr) {
return [...arr, "dookie"];
}
const result = putDookieInAnyArray(["I", "really", "don't", "like"]); // ["I", "really", "don't", "like", "dookie"]
const person = {
name: "Todd",
age: 29
};
const copyOfTodd = { ...person };
ES6's rest syntax offers a shorthand for including an arbitrary number of arguments to be passed to a function. It is like an inverse of the spread syntax, taking data and stuffing it into an array rather than unpacking an array of data, and it works in function arguments, as well as in array and object destructuring assignments.
function addFiveToABunchOfNumbers(...numbers) {
return numbers.map(x => x + 5);
}
const result = addFiveToABunchOfNumbers(4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10); // [9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15]
const [a, b, ...rest] = [1, 2, 3, 4]; // a: 1, b: 2, rest: [3, 4]
const { e, f, ...others } = {
e: 1,
f: 2,
g: 3,
h: 4
}; // e: 1, b: 2, others: { g: 3, h: 4 }
参考
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Spread_syntax
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Functions/rest_parameters
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Destructuring_assignment
How can you share code between files?
TODO
Why you might want to create static class members?
TODO
Other Answers
Related
If you are interested in how data structures are implemented, check out Lago, a Data Structures and Algorithms library for JavaScript. It is pretty much still WIP but I intend to make it into a library that is able to be used in production and also a reference resource for revising Data Structures and Algorithms.
Contributing
Feel free to make pull requests to correct any mistakes in the answers or suggest new questions.