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Feb
08

DescriptionReusable product components and patterns for Ajax-driven applications Ajax is one of the last and more ways to improve the online experience of users’ and create new and innovative web functionality. By allowing specific parts of a webpage to be displayed without refreshing the entire page, Ajax significantly improves the experience of web applications. It also allows Web developers to create intuitive and innovative interaction processes. AJAX applications for Web Developers provides the in-depth working knowledge of Ajax that web developers need to take their web applications to reach the next level. The book shows how to create an Ajax-driven web application from an object-oriented perspective, and includes discussion of several useful Ajax design patterns. This detailed guide covers the creation of connections to a MySQL database with PHP 5 with a custom Ajax engine and shows how to grace the response format with CSS, Javascript, XHTML, and as KE. . . More>>

Ajax for Web Application Developers

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7 Responses to “Ajax for Web Application Developers”

  1. February 8th, 2010 at 17:22 | #1

    Kris did a great job to be developer friendly. Even thought there are some “TODO” list in the sample code inbtro, the coding style is very clean, dood implementing Ajax MVC. It might be better if Kris can go little deep, for example, OO Javascript, mini-MVC object in view, I feel the display “will be too heavy if object has a lot of related events. In general, a reading purpose. Rating: 4 / 5

  2. February 8th, 2010 at 18:33 | #2

    I am web designer and I have a multimedia company and web developer. I bought this book because I think that AJAX is the next generation of code for web API. This book is very good, we talk in the language of developers and you can learn about AJAX with single excercise. Rating: 5 / 5

  3. February 8th, 2010 at 20:38 | #3

    First, I agree with the previous reviewer, who noted that this is not a book of AJAX for beginners. Is not. I do not think anyone has argued that it was. It ‘a book for web application developers seeking to incorporate AJAX technology in web applications. I do not expect a book with this type of application is suitable for beginners. This certainly is not, and I’m happy, having read enough beginner AJAX books that go beyond what an XmlHttpRequest is and explain some of the commonly used “stupid JavaScript tricks”, dropping the names of popular frameworks and tools on the road without really provide much information about loro.Detto this: I tried a book with the aim of this book for a lot ‘of time. Not from the book by Nicholas Zakas’ “Professional JavaScript for Web Developers” (which I still recommend) has this type of in-depth coverage of the inner workings of AJAX was offered. Paper Zakas’ (only two years) went into great detail on how to use JavaScript to do all the best things we now know as “AJAX”. . . never use the word. (Two years ago the word “AJAX” had not reached its saturation current password if it had been used much.) Revisits Hadlock and now that AJAX toolkits and frameworks that support various (Dojo, script. Acula. We, Google Web Toolkit, etc.) are now commonplace. He does not give a tutorial on how to use a particular toolkit or a framework, however, explains how you can write an “engine” of yours. He starts with a good introduction to AJAX, including explanations of how to use XML and JSON in the response, moves on the basic principles of object-oriented JavaScript, and therefore provides some examples of reusable components to include in its JavaScript JavaScript / AJAX engine. If you’re trying to reinvent the wheel and write such an engine yourself, or simply a desire to understand how a toolkit like Dojo or scripts. Acula. us is built, this is great information. Where the book Zakas’ was an all-dive head first into deep including JavaScript, this book is shorter, but still fairly comprehensive tutorial that takes you to information quickly critiche.Il book also includes useful chapters on security and best pratiche.Nei cases in which the book is lacking is its coverage of server-side interaction. While focusing on PHP, gives some examples of connection to the ASP. NET and ColdFusion, but. . . there is no reference on Java/J2EE. (Ryan Asleson’s “Pro Ajax and Java Frameworks” do not provide this same type of information about Struts, Spring and JSF.) However, where this book shines is in its in-depth explanation of how JavaScript / AJAX toolkits work and how to build your own or expand existing ones. This is still the only book I’ve seen that attempts to do so. Rating: 4 / 5

  4. February 8th, 2010 at 22:03 | #4

    I attended the presentation Kris Hadlock at AjaxWorld Conference & Expo last week. I’m glad I did because I wanted to learn to write reusable JavaScript libraries in my projects. His book is all about AJAX, but the team of engineering it. Why? I have found not many books out there show you how to capture server errors and record them for debugging and improving the project. Not many books show how to implement the back-end for your frond-end applications. Not many books give examples from the real world. “AJAX for Web Applications Developers” does all for you. It ‘very easy to understand codifications Kris’ and explanations, because his book is well codified and applied the standards codifica.Codici source: examples shown in the book can be downloaded from the publishers. All you have to do is create a account.Personalmente have many AJAX books in my library, but particularly liked “Ajax for Web Application Developers”. I highly recommend to those who are willing to learn in a simple way to create reusable object JavaScript-oriented libraries and understand the methodology subject AJAX.Buona fortune Rating: 5 / 5

  5. February 8th, 2010 at 22:31 | #5

    Bought the book, liked the author’s intention, but I came across a big problem. N. source code for the book. I emailed the publisher last week and heard zero back from loro.Nota publishers: Take care of your fear lettori.Ho customer service is dead. Perhaps it was outsourced. Rating: 3 / 5

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