The title of the book implies that it is a supplement by the use of the word "Hacks" and should be rated as such. Perhaps the author could have given this indication more, however, it is clear it is not an exhausting introduction to Ajax. For those of us who have been around in this industry long
Ajax Hacks: Tips & Tools for Creating Responsive Web Sites
โ Scribed by Bruce W. Perry
- Publisher
- O'Reilly Media
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 448
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The title of the book implies that it is a supplement by the use of the word "Hacks" and should be rated as such. Perhaps the author could have given this indication more, however, it is clear it is not an exhausting introduction to Ajax. For those of us who have been around in this industry long enough and understand the underlying technologies this is a good book as an extra with many tips for the web developer. Of course most of this can be obtained off the web and through forums, but it is always handy to have a reference like this on the shelf. I weighed this up with Ajax for Dummies and knew I would get more out of this book. Because the basics of Ajax is so simple to learn (suggest looking at the tutorials on the web) this book has more value. I have given it a 5 because I feel that overall it is worth more than just 4. However, note that it was published in 2006 and there are many more books coming out on this subject.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Ajax, the popular term for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, is one of the most important combinations of technologies for web developers to know these days. With its rich grouping of technologies, Ajax developers can create interactive web applications with XML-based web services, using JavaScript i
With 90 detailed hacks, expert web developers Jesse Cravens and Jeff Burtoft demonstrate intriguing uses of HTML5-related technologies. Each recipe provides a clear explanation, screenshots, and complete code examples for specifications that include Canvas, SVG, CSS3, multimedia, data storage, web w
All in all, this is a pretty good book. It covers many advanced things that most people would be able to think of, but it is a very good way to spark the lightbulb in your head into thinking up something really useful. For example, after reading the chapter about HTML bar grapsh, I thought of using
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