Christian Heilmann compares the Object Literal to Douglas Crockford's Module pattern and finds that the Module pattern fixes a major problem of the object literal - the difficult choice of using this or fully qualified references to functions in the same block. Christian also covers the improvements in the Module Pattern, like the decluttering of the return block, which makes the resulting a little easier to work with.
Eric Miraglia explains Douglas Crockford's Module pattern, a way of creating encapsulated JavaScript functions that offer private and public methods and properties. It uses an anonymous function that returns an object containing our methods, and avoids the big issue of cluttering up the global namespace with global functions. Its based on the Singleton pattern.
Klaus Komenda discusses a number of ways of encapsulating JavaScript functions into objects and namespaces, and shows how to use each pattern. He covers Singletons, Douglas Crockford's Module Pattern and Custom Objects, building the same functionality with each technique.
First in a series of talks from Douglas Crockford about the JavaScript language. These talks cover the JavaScript language, from the history, the language, advanced features, platforms, standards and programming style. Talks about inheritance, using functions to build objects, closures, as well as the basic JavaScript syntax. Also covers code conventions. JavaScript is a language that requires discipline.
Douglas Crockford introduces the JavaScript Object Notation, a lightweight data interchange format that's giving XML-based web services a run for its money. Its a subset of the JavaScript programming language, and very easy for programs to parse or generate, and so its not surprising that all major languages now have JSON libraries/code snippets.