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Many programming languages require a compiler to compile them to machine-readable code, but Web browsers can read JavaScript with no compilation required. However ...
Over 25% of malicious JavaScript code is obfuscated by so-called 'packers', a software packaging method that has given attackers a way of evading signature-based detection, according to security ...
Free the Web The Free Software Foundation doesn't want to do away with JavaScript, but rather wants to give users more transparency and control over the code that runs on their computer.
The platform is called InAppBrowser, and any interested user can access it to check how a web browser embedded within an app injects JavaScript code to track people. For those unfamiliar ...
A security researcher has shed light on how invisible characters can be snuck into JavaScript code to introduce security risks, like backdoors, into your software. Not everything is what it seems ...
Why use an editor for JavaScript programming instead of an IDE? In a word: speed. The essential difference between editors and IDEs is that IDEs can debug and sometimes profile your code ...
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