JavaScript is just a language. It's far from restricted to web browsers. Such examples of offline JavaScript use include AIR <http://www.adobe.com/products/air> or even a standalone V8 <http://v8.googlecode.com> engine.
Javascript is embedded into HTML pages, so yes. You can create an HTML document on your desktop and include javascript within. Once you save the file, you can open it with the web browser that makes you happiest and test your javascript code, all while being offline. Then only note here is you will not be able to test any postbacks.
A JavaScript tutorial contains instructions that will teach you how to code in JavaScript.
HTML, CSS, & JavaScript.
Javascript does not have classes
Javascript can help in browseing
Javascript is embedded into HTML pages, so yes. You can create an HTML document on your desktop and include javascript within. Once you save the file, you can open it with the web browser that makes you happiest and test your javascript code, all while being offline. Then only note here is you will not be able to test any postbacks.
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500
No
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A JavaScript tutorial contains instructions that will teach you how to code in JavaScript.
HTML, CSS, & JavaScript.
There are some: HTML, which isn't really an alternative, but is another, simpler script-writing language, Java, which is much more complicated and can also work for stuf offline, and Python which is like Java. J0E
Javascript does not have classes
Javascript was created in 1995.
Javascript can help in browseing