


Today, JavaScript has plenty of frameworks and libraries to simplify complex projects, such as AngularJS, jQuery, and ReactJS. The latter even started developing the first modern JavaScript engine, called V8, which compiles bytecode into native machine code. JavaScript has continued to grow alongside new browsers like Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome since then. It was a general-purpose scripting language to ensure web pages’ interoperability across different browsers and devices. After Netscape submitted it to ECMA International as a standard specification for web browsers, JavaScript pioneered the release of ECMAScript. The initial versions of the scripting language were for internal use only.
