How to use Escape Characters in JavaScript?

How to use Escape Characters in JavaScript?

What is an escape character in JavaScript? A backslash (\\) in JavaScript is used as an escape character. It allows us to insert special characters into a string by changing …

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Online JavaScript Compiler

JavaScript Online Compiler

Run JS code online for free to use, where you can write, run button, and share Js code. A user-friendly Javascript text editor supports standard libraries and takes users input.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to learn JavaScript before React or Vue?
Yes, solid JavaScript fundamentals are essential before tackling frameworks. Spend at least 4-8 weeks on core JS (variables, functions, arrays, objects, DOM, async) before touching React, Vue, or Angular. Jumping straight to a framework without knowing the underlying language leads to copy-paste developers who can't debug or extend their code, panels notice this in defense. ES6+ syntax (arrow functions, destructuring, spread/rest) is mandatory before frameworks.
What's the difference between var, let, and const?
var is the old (pre-2015) way to declare variables, function-scoped, hoisted, can be redeclared. Avoid in modern code. let is block-scoped, can be reassigned, can't be redeclared in the same scope. Use for variables whose value will change. const is block-scoped, can't be reassigned. Use by default; switch to let only when reassignment is needed. Rule of thumb: const by default, let when needed, never var.
What's async/await and why does it matter?
async and await are modern JavaScript syntax for working with Promises (asynchronous operations like fetching data from an API). Old callback-based code becomes deeply nested ("callback hell"). Promises improved this. async/await makes asynchronous code read like synchronous code, much easier to follow. Essential for any modern web app that talks to a server: const response = await fetch('/api/users'); const data = await response.json();.
How do I run JavaScript outside a browser?
Install Node.js (free, cross-platform from nodejs.org), it's a JavaScript runtime that lets you execute .js files from your terminal. Use cases beyond browsers: server-side web apps (Express, Fastify, NestJS), command-line tools, build tooling (webpack, Vite), desktop apps (Electron), testing scripts (Jest, Playwright). Browse our Node.js Projects for server-side examples.
Should I learn TypeScript instead of JavaScript?
Learn JavaScript first, then add TypeScript when you're comfortable. TypeScript is JavaScript with optional static typing, it catches more bugs at compile time but adds complexity. For 2026 capstones using React/Vue/Angular, TypeScript is increasingly the standard. For pure jQuery or vanilla JS capstones, TypeScript is overkill. See our TypeScript Tutorial when you're ready.
What can I build with JavaScript for my capstone?
Browser-only capstones: games (Tic-Tac-Toe, Hangman, Memory, Flappy Bird), calculators and converters, interactive dashboards with Chart.js. Front-end + back-end (full-stack): MERN stack capstones (React + Express + MongoDB), real-time chat apps with Socket.io, e-commerce front-ends consuming a PHP back-end. Browse our JavaScript Projects for examples.