Ask HN: Which (physical) book should I get to learn JavaScript/TS?
I am a DevOps Engineer. I describe myself as a "good conceptual programmer": I understand algorithms, data structures, etc. (I used to do some C, which I credit with a lot of that.) I also have very good knowledge about the internet: networking, routing, IP, DNS, HTTP, its methods, headers, return codes, API best practices, etc.
However, my knowledge rapidly drops to zero when front-end / the browser is involved. For reference, when I last working with HTML/JS, you couldn't rewrite the URL in the user's browser without reloading the page. Single-page apps seemed like magic to me until I figured out this is now possible.
So I (assume I) would like/need a book that doesn't spend too much time with algorithmics / data structure explanations, but at the same time explains all the lower-level relevant concepts: DOM and friends, execution contexts, browser-side security& permissions, local storage, etc.
I used to say I hated JS, but I must admit at this stage that's mostly just ego anymore, as I really don't know 2023 JS. (Also, should I just go TS? Or is TS only accessible to people who already know all of the context of JS, alluded to above?)
For reference, I felt vaguely the same about Python, but after reading and developing a crush on Fluent Python (Luciano Ramalho), I really understood the language, conventions, community, and now love it!! I am effectively looking for the same with something I can develop webpages with—which has gotta be JS/TS, right?
Thanks! (I hope the formatting is okay; written on my phone.)