javascript-mastery

Comprehensive JavaScript reference covering 33+ essential concepts every developer should know. From fundamentals like primitives and closures to advanced patterns like async/await and functional programming. Use when explaining JS concepts, debugging JavaScript issues, or teaching JavaScript fundamentals.

242 stars

Best use case

javascript-mastery is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt. It is especially useful for teams working in multi. Comprehensive JavaScript reference covering 33+ essential concepts every developer should know. From fundamentals like primitives and closures to advanced patterns like async/await and functional programming. Use when explaining JS concepts, debugging JavaScript issues, or teaching JavaScript fundamentals.

Comprehensive JavaScript reference covering 33+ essential concepts every developer should know. From fundamentals like primitives and closures to advanced patterns like async/await and functional programming. Use when explaining JS concepts, debugging JavaScript issues, or teaching JavaScript fundamentals.

Users should expect a more consistent workflow output, faster repeated execution, and less time spent rewriting prompts from scratch.

Practical example

Example input

Use the "javascript-mastery" skill to help with this workflow task. Context: Comprehensive JavaScript reference covering 33+ essential concepts every developer should know. From fundamentals like primitives and closures to advanced patterns like async/await and functional programming. Use when explaining JS concepts, debugging JavaScript issues, or teaching JavaScript fundamentals.

Example output

A structured workflow result with clearer steps, more consistent formatting, and an output that is easier to reuse in the next run.

When to use this skill

  • Use this skill when you want a reusable workflow rather than writing the same prompt again and again.

When not to use this skill

  • Do not use this when you only need a one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • Do not use it if you cannot install or maintain the related files, repository context, or supporting tools.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/javascript-mastery/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aiskillstore/marketplace/main/skills/sickn33/javascript-mastery/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/javascript-mastery/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How javascript-mastery Compares

Feature / Agentjavascript-masteryStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Comprehensive JavaScript reference covering 33+ essential concepts every developer should know. From fundamentals like primitives and closures to advanced patterns like async/await and functional programming. Use when explaining JS concepts, debugging JavaScript issues, or teaching JavaScript fundamentals.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# 🧠 JavaScript Mastery

> 33+ essential JavaScript concepts every developer should know, inspired by [33-js-concepts](https://github.com/leonardomso/33-js-concepts).

## When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when:

- Explaining JavaScript concepts
- Debugging tricky JS behavior
- Teaching JavaScript fundamentals
- Reviewing code for JS best practices
- Understanding language quirks

---

## 1. Fundamentals

### 1.1 Primitive Types

JavaScript has 7 primitive types:

```javascript
// String
const str = "hello";

// Number (integers and floats)
const num = 42;
const float = 3.14;

// BigInt (for large integers)
const big = 9007199254740991n;

// Boolean
const bool = true;

// Undefined
let undef; // undefined

// Null
const empty = null;

// Symbol (unique identifiers)
const sym = Symbol("description");
```

**Key points**:

- Primitives are immutable
- Passed by value
- `typeof null === "object"` is a historical bug

### 1.2 Type Coercion

JavaScript implicitly converts types:

```javascript
// String coercion
"5" + 3; // "53" (number → string)
"5" - 3; // 2    (string → number)

// Boolean coercion
Boolean(""); // false
Boolean("hello"); // true
Boolean(0); // false
Boolean([]); // true (!)

// Equality coercion
"5" == 5; // true  (coerces)
"5" === 5; // false (strict)
```

**Falsy values** (8 total):
`false`, `0`, `-0`, `0n`, `""`, `null`, `undefined`, `NaN`

### 1.3 Equality Operators

```javascript
// == (loose equality) - coerces types
null == undefined; // true
"1" == 1; // true

// === (strict equality) - no coercion
null === undefined; // false
"1" === 1; // false

// Object.is() - handles edge cases
Object.is(NaN, NaN); // true (NaN === NaN is false!)
Object.is(-0, 0); // false (0 === -0 is true!)
```

**Rule**: Always use `===` unless you have a specific reason not to.

---

## 2. Scope & Closures

### 2.1 Scope Types

```javascript
// Global scope
var globalVar = "global";

function outer() {
  // Function scope
  var functionVar = "function";

  if (true) {
    // Block scope (let/const only)
    let blockVar = "block";
    const alsoBlock = "block";
    var notBlock = "function"; // var ignores blocks!
  }
}
```

### 2.2 Closures

A closure is a function that remembers its lexical scope:

```javascript
function createCounter() {
  let count = 0; // "closed over" variable

  return {
    increment() {
      return ++count;
    },
    decrement() {
      return --count;
    },
    getCount() {
      return count;
    },
  };
}

const counter = createCounter();
counter.increment(); // 1
counter.increment(); // 2
counter.getCount(); // 2
```

**Common use cases**:

- Data privacy (module pattern)
- Function factories
- Partial application
- Memoization

### 2.3 var vs let vs const

```javascript
// var - function scoped, hoisted, can redeclare
var x = 1;
var x = 2; // OK

// let - block scoped, hoisted (TDZ), no redeclare
let y = 1;
// let y = 2; // Error!

// const - like let, but can't reassign
const z = 1;
// z = 2; // Error!

// BUT: const objects are mutable
const obj = { a: 1 };
obj.a = 2; // OK
obj.b = 3; // OK
```

---

## 3. Functions & Execution

### 3.1 Call Stack

```javascript
function first() {
  console.log("first start");
  second();
  console.log("first end");
}

function second() {
  console.log("second");
}

first();
// Output:
// "first start"
// "second"
// "first end"
```

Stack overflow example:

```javascript
function infinite() {
  infinite(); // No base case!
}
infinite(); // RangeError: Maximum call stack size exceeded
```

### 3.2 Hoisting

```javascript
// Variable hoisting
console.log(a); // undefined (hoisted, not initialized)
var a = 5;

console.log(b); // ReferenceError (TDZ)
let b = 5;

// Function hoisting
sayHi(); // Works!
function sayHi() {
  console.log("Hi!");
}

// Function expressions don't hoist
sayBye(); // TypeError
var sayBye = function () {
  console.log("Bye!");
};
```

### 3.3 this Keyword

```javascript
// Global context
console.log(this); // window (browser) or global (Node)

// Object method
const obj = {
  name: "Alice",
  greet() {
    console.log(this.name); // "Alice"
  },
};

// Arrow functions (lexical this)
const obj2 = {
  name: "Bob",
  greet: () => {
    console.log(this.name); // undefined (inherits outer this)
  },
};

// Explicit binding
function greet() {
  console.log(this.name);
}
greet.call({ name: "Charlie" }); // "Charlie"
greet.apply({ name: "Diana" }); // "Diana"
const bound = greet.bind({ name: "Eve" });
bound(); // "Eve"
```

---

## 4. Event Loop & Async

### 4.1 Event Loop

```javascript
console.log("1");

setTimeout(() => console.log("2"), 0);

Promise.resolve().then(() => console.log("3"));

console.log("4");

// Output: 1, 4, 3, 2
// Why? Microtasks (Promises) run before macrotasks (setTimeout)
```

**Execution order**:

1. Synchronous code (call stack)
2. Microtasks (Promise callbacks, queueMicrotask)
3. Macrotasks (setTimeout, setInterval, I/O)

### 4.2 Callbacks

```javascript
// Callback pattern
function fetchData(callback) {
  setTimeout(() => {
    callback(null, { data: "result" });
  }, 1000);
}

// Error-first convention
fetchData((error, result) => {
  if (error) {
    console.error(error);
    return;
  }
  console.log(result);
});

// Callback hell (avoid this!)
getData((data) => {
  processData(data, (processed) => {
    saveData(processed, (saved) => {
      notify(saved, () => {
        // 😱 Pyramid of doom
      });
    });
  });
});
```

### 4.3 Promises

```javascript
// Creating a Promise
const promise = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout(() => {
    resolve("Success!");
    // or: reject(new Error("Failed!"));
  }, 1000);
});

// Consuming Promises
promise
  .then((result) => console.log(result))
  .catch((error) => console.error(error))
  .finally(() => console.log("Done"));

// Promise combinators
Promise.all([p1, p2, p3]); // All must succeed
Promise.allSettled([p1, p2]); // Wait for all, get status
Promise.race([p1, p2]); // First to settle
Promise.any([p1, p2]); // First to succeed
```

### 4.4 async/await

```javascript
async function fetchUserData(userId) {
  try {
    const response = await fetch(`/api/users/${userId}`);
    if (!response.ok) throw new Error("Failed to fetch");
    const user = await response.json();
    return user;
  } catch (error) {
    console.error("Error:", error);
    throw error; // Re-throw for caller to handle
  }
}

// Parallel execution
async function fetchAll() {
  const [users, posts] = await Promise.all([
    fetch("/api/users"),
    fetch("/api/posts"),
  ]);
  return { users, posts };
}
```

---

## 5. Functional Programming

### 5.1 Higher-Order Functions

Functions that take or return functions:

```javascript
// Takes a function
const numbers = [1, 2, 3];
const doubled = numbers.map((n) => n * 2); // [2, 4, 6]

// Returns a function
function multiply(a) {
  return function (b) {
    return a * b;
  };
}
const double = multiply(2);
double(5); // 10
```

### 5.2 Pure Functions

```javascript
// Pure: same input → same output, no side effects
function add(a, b) {
  return a + b;
}

// Impure: modifies external state
let total = 0;
function addToTotal(value) {
  total += value; // Side effect!
  return total;
}

// Impure: depends on external state
function getDiscount(price) {
  return price * globalDiscountRate; // External dependency
}
```

### 5.3 map, filter, reduce

```javascript
const users = [
  { name: "Alice", age: 25 },
  { name: "Bob", age: 30 },
  { name: "Charlie", age: 35 },
];

// map: transform each element
const names = users.map((u) => u.name);
// ["Alice", "Bob", "Charlie"]

// filter: keep elements matching condition
const adults = users.filter((u) => u.age >= 30);
// [{ name: "Bob", ... }, { name: "Charlie", ... }]

// reduce: accumulate into single value
const totalAge = users.reduce((sum, u) => sum + u.age, 0);
// 90

// Chaining
const result = users
  .filter((u) => u.age >= 30)
  .map((u) => u.name)
  .join(", ");
// "Bob, Charlie"
```

### 5.4 Currying & Composition

```javascript
// Currying: transform f(a, b, c) into f(a)(b)(c)
const curry = (fn) => {
  return function curried(...args) {
    if (args.length >= fn.length) {
      return fn.apply(this, args);
    }
    return (...moreArgs) => curried(...args, ...moreArgs);
  };
};

const add = curry((a, b, c) => a + b + c);
add(1)(2)(3); // 6
add(1, 2)(3); // 6
add(1)(2, 3); // 6

// Composition: combine functions
const compose =
  (...fns) =>
  (x) =>
    fns.reduceRight((acc, fn) => fn(acc), x);

const pipe =
  (...fns) =>
  (x) =>
    fns.reduce((acc, fn) => fn(acc), x);

const addOne = (x) => x + 1;
const double = (x) => x * 2;

const addThenDouble = compose(double, addOne);
addThenDouble(5); // 12 = (5 + 1) * 2

const doubleThenAdd = pipe(double, addOne);
doubleThenAdd(5); // 11 = (5 * 2) + 1
```

---

## 6. Objects & Prototypes

### 6.1 Prototypal Inheritance

```javascript
// Prototype chain
const animal = {
  speak() {
    console.log("Some sound");
  },
};

const dog = Object.create(animal);
dog.bark = function () {
  console.log("Woof!");
};

dog.speak(); // "Some sound" (inherited)
dog.bark(); // "Woof!" (own method)

// ES6 Classes (syntactic sugar)
class Animal {
  speak() {
    console.log("Some sound");
  }
}

class Dog extends Animal {
  bark() {
    console.log("Woof!");
  }
}
```

### 6.2 Object Methods

```javascript
const obj = { a: 1, b: 2 };

// Keys, values, entries
Object.keys(obj); // ["a", "b"]
Object.values(obj); // [1, 2]
Object.entries(obj); // [["a", 1], ["b", 2]]

// Shallow copy
const copy = { ...obj };
const copy2 = Object.assign({}, obj);

// Freeze (immutable)
const frozen = Object.freeze({ x: 1 });
frozen.x = 2; // Silently fails (or throws in strict mode)

// Seal (no add/delete, can modify)
const sealed = Object.seal({ x: 1 });
sealed.x = 2; // OK
sealed.y = 3; // Fails
delete sealed.x; // Fails
```

---

## 7. Modern JavaScript (ES6+)

### 7.1 Destructuring

```javascript
// Array destructuring
const [first, second, ...rest] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// first = 1, second = 2, rest = [3, 4, 5]

// Object destructuring
const { name, age, city = "Unknown" } = { name: "Alice", age: 25 };
// name = "Alice", age = 25, city = "Unknown"

// Renaming
const { name: userName } = { name: "Bob" };
// userName = "Bob"

// Nested
const {
  address: { street },
} = { address: { street: "123 Main" } };
```

### 7.2 Spread & Rest

```javascript
// Spread: expand iterable
const arr1 = [1, 2, 3];
const arr2 = [...arr1, 4, 5]; // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

const obj1 = { a: 1 };
const obj2 = { ...obj1, b: 2 }; // { a: 1, b: 2 }

// Rest: collect remaining
function sum(...numbers) {
  return numbers.reduce((a, b) => a + b, 0);
}
sum(1, 2, 3, 4); // 10
```

### 7.3 Modules

```javascript
// Named exports
export const PI = 3.14159;
export function square(x) {
  return x * x;
}

// Default export
export default class Calculator {}

// Importing
import Calculator, { PI, square } from "./math.js";
import * as math from "./math.js";

// Dynamic import
const module = await import("./dynamic.js");
```

### 7.4 Optional Chaining & Nullish Coalescing

```javascript
// Optional chaining (?.)
const user = { address: { city: "NYC" } };
const city = user?.address?.city; // "NYC"
const zip = user?.address?.zip; // undefined (no error)
const fn = user?.getName?.(); // undefined if no method

// Nullish coalescing (??)
const value = null ?? "default"; // "default"
const zero = 0 ?? "default"; // 0 (not nullish!)
const empty = "" ?? "default"; // "" (not nullish!)

// Compare with ||
const value2 = 0 || "default"; // "default" (0 is falsy)
```

---

## Quick Reference Card

| Concept        | Key Point                         |
| :------------- | :-------------------------------- |
| `==` vs `===`  | Always use `===`                  |
| `var` vs `let` | Prefer `let`/`const`              |
| Closures       | Function + lexical scope          |
| `this`         | Depends on how function is called |
| Event loop     | Microtasks before macrotasks      |
| Pure functions | Same input → same output          |
| Prototypes     | `__proto__` → prototype chain     |
| `??` vs `\|\|` | `??` only checks null/undefined   |

---

## Resources

- [33 JS Concepts](https://github.com/leonardomso/33-js-concepts)
- [JavaScript.info](https://javascript.info/)
- [MDN JavaScript Guide](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide)
- [You Don't Know JS](https://github.com/getify/You-Dont-Know-JS)

Related Skills

feedback-mastery

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Navigate difficult conversations and deliver constructive feedback using structured frameworks. Covers the Preparation-Delivery-Follow-up model and Situation-Behavior-Impact (SBI) feedback technique. Use when preparing for difficult conversations, giving feedback, or managing conflicts.

modern-javascript-patterns

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Master ES6+ features including async/await, destructuring, spread operators, arrow functions, promises, modules, iterators, generators, and functional programming patterns for writing clean, efficient JavaScript code. Use when refactoring legacy code, implementing modern patterns, or optimizing JavaScript applications.

javascript-typescript-typescript-scaffold

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

You are a TypeScript project architecture expert specializing in scaffolding production-ready Node.js and frontend applications. Generate complete project structures with modern tooling (pnpm, Vite, N

javascript-testing-patterns

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Implement comprehensive testing strategies using Jest, Vitest, and Testing Library for unit tests, integration tests, and end-to-end testing with mocking, fixtures, and test-driven development. Use when writing JavaScript/TypeScript tests, setting up test infrastructure, or implementing TDD/BDD workflows.

javascript-pro

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Master modern JavaScript with ES6+, async patterns, and Node.js APIs. Handles promises, event loops, and browser/Node compatibility. Use PROACTIVELY for JavaScript optimization, async debugging, or complex JS patterns.

javascript-sdk

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

JavaScript/TypeScript SDK for inference.sh - run AI apps, build agents, integrate 150+ models. Package: @inferencesh/sdk (npm install). Full TypeScript support, streaming, file uploads. Build agents with template or ad-hoc patterns, tool builder API, skills, human approval. Use for: JavaScript integration, TypeScript, Node.js, React, Next.js, frontend apps. Triggers: javascript sdk, typescript sdk, npm install, node.js api, js client, react ai, next.js ai, frontend sdk, @inferencesh/sdk, typescript agent, browser sdk, js integration

tailwind-css-v4-mastery

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Expert guidance for leveraging Tailwind CSS V4's new Oxide engine, CSS-first configuration, and modern styling paradigms. This skill transforms Claude into a Tailwind V4 architecture specialist, capable of designing component systems, optimizing performance, and executing complex styling challenges with precision.

pytest-mastery

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Python testing with pytest using uv package manager. Use when: (1) Running Python tests, (2) Writing test files or test functions, (3) Setting up fixtures, (4) Parametrizing tests, (5) Generating coverage reports, (6) Testing FastAPI applications, (7) Debugging test failures, (8) Configuring pytest options. Triggers: "run tests", "write tests", "test coverage", "pytest", "unit test", "integration test", "test FastAPI".

fastapi-mastery

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Comprehensive FastAPI development skill covering REST API creation, routing, request/response handling, validation, authentication, database integration, middleware, and deployment. Use when working with FastAPI projects, building APIs, implementing CRUD operations, setting up authentication/authorization, integrating databases (SQL/NoSQL), adding middleware, handling WebSockets, or deploying FastAPI applications. Triggered by requests involving .py files with FastAPI code, API endpoint creation, Pydantic models, or FastAPI-specific features.

azure-quotas

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Check/manage Azure quotas and usage across providers. For deployment planning, capacity validation, region selection. WHEN: "check quotas", "service limits", "current usage", "request quota increase", "quota exceeded", "validate capacity", "regional availability", "provisioning limits", "vCPU limit", "how many vCPUs available in my subscription".

DevOps & Infrastructure

raindrop-io

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

Manage Raindrop.io bookmarks with AI assistance. Save and organize bookmarks, search your collection, manage reading lists, and organize research materials. Use when working with bookmarks, web research, reading lists, or when user mentions Raindrop.io.

Data & Research

zlibrary-to-notebooklm

242
from aiskillstore/marketplace

自动从 Z-Library 下载书籍并上传到 Google NotebookLM。支持 PDF/EPUB 格式,自动转换,一键创建知识库。