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Bücher: Java & JavaScript

AVG Rating: 8.00
  Hinzugefügt 08 Nov 06   Aktualisiert 29 Aug 08
Ajax Bible  
29.99 €
Neu ab 18.67 €
5 Gebraucht ab 17.69 €

Author Steven Holzner
Publisher Wiley & Sons
Publication Date 2007-04-13
Taschenbuch - 695 Pages
ISBN 0470102632

Amazon Reviews
amazon.de:
Build interactive Web applications with Ajax

Create live searches and online spreadsheets

Discover programming mistakes to avoid!

Create blazing-fast Web applications with powerful Ajax

If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in-depth book. You’ll find easy-to-follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years.

  • Master the fundamentals?JavaScript®, XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS
  • Tie Ajax into Google with the Google® API

  • Handle simultaneous XMLHttpRequest objects in Ajax

  • Use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others

  • Understand the Document Object Model (DOM)

  • Create floating menus and effects with CSS

  • Encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript

  • Adapt real-world examples to your own programs

Companion Web site

Find all the code used throughout the book at www.wiley.com/go/ajaxbible

amazon.de:
Steven Holzner, PhD,is the author of nearly 100 technology books including Ajax For Dummies and the Ajax Visual Blueprint. He specializes in writing about online applications, and has authored popular books on the components of Ajax including JavaScript, XML, browser objects, and Web services. He teaches classes to programmers around the country on the central skill in Ajax--using XML online and in-depth. He has been a contributing editor to PC Magazine, and was on the faculty at Cornell University and MIT.
amazon.co.uk:
Build interactive Web applications with Ajax

Create live searches and online spreadsheets

Discover programming mistakes to avoid!

Create blazing?fast Web applications with powerful Ajax

If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in?depth book. You?ll find easy?to?follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years.

? Master the fundamentals??JavaScript(r), XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS
?

Tie Ajax into Google with the Google(r) API
?

Handle simultaneous XMLHttpRequest objects in Ajax
?

Use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others
?

Understand the Document Object Model (DOM)
?

Create floating menus and effects with CSS
?

Encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript
?

Adapt real?world examples to your own programs

Companion Web site

Find all the code used throughout the book at www.wiley.com/go/ajaxbible
amazon.co.uk:
This book teaches you to build interactive Web applications with Ajax. It enables you to create live searches and online spreadsheets. It also helps you discover programming mistakes to avoid! It also enables you to create blazing fast Web applications with powerful Ajax. If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in depth book. You’ll find easy to follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years. It enables you to master the fundamentals JavaScript[regsitered], XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS Tie Ajax into Google with the Google[registered] API. It shows you how to handle simultaneous XMLHttp Request objects in Ajax. It helps you to use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others. It enables you to understand the Document Object Model (DOM) and create floating menus and effects with CSS.

It shows you how to encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript. It helps you to adapt real world examples to your own programs.

amazon.co.uk:
Build interactive Web applications with Ajax

Create live searches and online spreadsheets

Discover programming mistakes to avoid!

Create blazing?fast Web applications with powerful Ajax

If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in?depth book. You?ll find easy?to?follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years.

  • Master the fundamentals?JavaScript®, XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS
  • Tie Ajax into Google with the Google® API

  • Handle simultaneous XMLHttpRequest objects in Ajax

  • Use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others

  • Understand the Document Object Model (DOM)

  • Create floating menus and effects with CSS

  • Encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript

  • Adapt real?world examples to your own programs

Companion Web site

Find all the code used throughout the book at www.wiley.com/go/ajaxbible

amazon.co.uk:
Steven Holzner, PhD,is the author of nearly 100 technology books including Ajax For Dummies and the Ajax Visual Blueprint. He specializes in writing about online applications, and has authored popular books on the components of Ajax including JavaScript, XML, browser objects, and Web services. He teaches classes to programmers around the country on the central skill in Ajax?using XML online and in?depth. He has been a contributing editor to PC Magazine, and was on the faculty at Cornell University and MIT.
amazon.com:
Build interactive Web applications with Ajax

Create live searches and online spreadsheets

Discover programming mistakes to avoid!

Create blazing-fast Web applications with powerful Ajax

If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in-depth book. You’ll find easy-to-follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years.

* Master the fundamentals--JavaScript(r), XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS
*

Tie Ajax into Google with the Google(r) API
*

Handle simultaneous XMLHttpRequest objects in Ajax
*

Use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others
*

Understand the Document Object Model (DOM)
*

Create floating menus and effects with CSS
*

Encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript
*

Adapt real-world examples to your own programs

Companion Web site

Find all the code used throughout the book at www.wiley.com/go/ajaxbible
amazon.com:
Build interactive Web applications with Ajax

Create live searches and online spreadsheets

Discover programming mistakes to avoid!

Create blazing-fast Web applications with powerful Ajax

If you think that mastering Ajax is too difficult, guess again. You can create Web applications that look and feel like desktop apps in less time than you think with the comprehensive Ajax instruction in this in-depth book. You’ll find easy-to-follow tutorials, hundreds of tips and tricks, and so much practical information that even skilled developers will reach for this book first. Let this Bible be your guide as you jump into the hottest Web programming technology in years.

* Master the fundamentals--JavaScript(r), XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS
*

Tie Ajax into Google with the Google(r) API
*

Handle simultaneous XMLHttpRequest objects in Ajax
*

Use Ajax frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, AjaxTags, and others
*

Understand the Document Object Model (DOM)
*

Create floating menus and effects with CSS
*

Encrypt data over plain HTTP using JavaScript
*

Adapt real-world examples to your own programs

Companion Web site

Find all the code used throughout the book at www.wiley.com/go/ajaxbible
amazon.com:
* Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a combination of existing technologies that programmers can use to build blazingly fast interactive Web applications; it now powers cutting-edge apps such as Google Maps, Google Suggest, Gmail, Amazon’s A9.com, and flickr
* This is the Ajax book developers will reach for first-nearly 650 pages packed with clear explanations that cut through Ajax complexities, short tutorials that demonstrate Ajax techniques, real-world examples that programmers can adapt, and hundreds of useful tips and tricks
* Topics covered include working with JavaScript, tying Ajax into Google, debugging Ajax, using the DOM, harnessing Frameworks, handling Cascading Style Sheets, working with Ajax patterns, and securing Ajax applications
* The companion Web site includes all code from the book
amazon.com:
  • Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a combination of existing technologies that programmers can use to build blazingly fast interactive Web applications; it now powers cutting-edge apps such as Google Maps, Google Suggest, Gmail, Amazon’s A9.com, and flickr
  • This is the Ajax book developers will reach for first-nearly 650 pages packed with clear explanations that cut through Ajax complexities, short tutorials that demonstrate Ajax techniques, real-world examples that programmers can adapt, and hundreds of useful tips and tricks
  • Topics covered include working with JavaScript, tying Ajax into Google, debugging Ajax, using the DOM, harnessing Frameworks, handling Cascading Style Sheets, working with Ajax patterns, and securing Ajax applications
  • The companion Web site includes all code from the book
amazon.com:
  • Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a combination of existing technologies that programmers can use to build blazingly fast interactive Web applications; it now powers cutting-edge apps such as Google Maps, Google Suggest, Gmail, Amazon’s A9.com, and flickr
  • This is the Ajax book developers will reach for first-nearly 650 pages packed with clear explanations that cut through Ajax complexities, short tutorials that demonstrate Ajax techniques, real-world examples that programmers can adapt, and hundreds of useful tips and tricks
  • Topics covered include working with JavaScript, tying Ajax into Google, debugging Ajax, using the DOM, harnessing Frameworks, handling Cascading Style Sheets, working with Ajax patterns, and securing Ajax applications
  • The companion Web site includes all code from the book
amazon.com:
The Ajax Bible will be the most complete, comprehensive book on Ajax—the hot, new technology used by Google, Flickr and Amazon. It’s designed to be the first book that developers will reach for. Using this book, readers will soon be creating Web applications as rich and responsive as their desktop software. Many think that learning Ajax can be difficult, but expert author Steven Holzner, Ph.D, uses hundreds of tutorials, tips, tricks, and hacks to prove that it isn’t rocket science. This book is packed with real-world ideas readily adaptable for readers’ own use. Subjects covered include Working with JavaScript; Tying Ajax into Google, Debugging Ajax; Using the DOM; Using Frameworks to create Ajax applications; Handling Cascading Style Sheets with Ajax; Ajax patterns; Ajax security; and much more. A companion Web site will provide all the code used throughout the book.
[ Kommentar hinzufügen ]Amazon Customer Comments
Good book, but lacks JSON discussionRating: 3
01 Jan 2008 @ amazon.com
I don’t usually write reviews on books, but since I have recently purchased this one I felt it might help others if I did so.

I have 2 main complaints with this book:
1) Repeated use of the same code - over & over - to provide filler for the page count.
2) Complete lack of discussion of JSON.

Don’t get me wrong, this is a good book, but perhaps not the best if you fall into these categories:
a) You know PHP very well
b) You are comfortable with adding Javascript such as "onclick = DoMyFunction()" to your HTML.

Like another reviewer, I found the repeated duplication of the same code over and over to be a bit annoying, and I began to develop a resentment that I thought I had purchased a "bible" when in reality it was just a "thick book". I think I understand what the author was trying to do with this approach, but I found it a bit annoying.

It does provide a decent overview of Ajax frameworks, and has been instrumental in spuring me on to research other Ajax frameworks on the net. But the complete lack of discussion of JSON has left me needing either another book or seeking more info on the internet.

I think that a 2nd edition addressing the above issues might turn this into a GREAT book. If you are complete beginner to Javascript and PHP, this might be a decent pick for you as is.

(I will say all of this with the caveate that programming language books become obsolete almost overnight, sometimes.)
I expected moreRating: 3
02 Oct 2007 @ amazon.com
This book convers very well a lot of subjects on Ajax, and a lot it doesn’t.

There are two chapters focused on PHP. These are on the Parte IV, named Advanced Ajax. But in this two chapters, if you try to find Ajax, you won’t get Anything!!!

This book is not aimed for advanced or experts of Ajax, it’s just for the beginner and maybe intermediate.

If your’re searching a book for some advanced Ajax techniques. GET ANOTHER BOOK!!
A Bible in Size OnlyRating: 2
24 Jul 2007 @ amazon.com
This book is way bigger than it needs to be. The code examples take up enormous amounts of space. When stepping through an example, the entire example code is (usually) repeated with the new line under discussion added. Even the simplest example takes up pages of text. Every new example gets the cross-browser code for obtaining an XMLhttprequest object. Do we really need that repeated for each example?

The examples are mostly very simple, usually replacing one line of text with another. Then there’s the screenshots. How informative is it to see two entire Internet Explorer windows, complete with toolbars, and a tiny speck of text that changes to before the Ajax call to an after Ajax call? The coverage of client and server-side libraries is so minimal and the examples so simple that the author could have just listed what libraries are available.

Most of the book has nothing to do with Ajax. There are chapters on DOM, javascript, CSS but I can’t understand who their target audience is. For instance, if you don’t know anything about DOM, you won’t learn enough to be useful. If you do know some (even a little), you won’t learn anything at all.

The last five chapters are the advanced Ajax section. The first three are an introduction to PHP. Really. How to declare a variable. How to make a comment. No Ajax at all. Again, if you don’t know PHP, you’re better off getting a better book. If you think the last two chapters might build on this tutorial of PHP, you’re mistaken. No more PHP. On to java server pages, javabeans, and an odd little ending with two page discussion of Model-View-Controller. Again, if you don’t know JSP, you won’t understand what’s going on. If you do, you won’t learn anything.

The book is a nice introduction to Ajax, it just contains way to much filler and never does anything in any depth.
Solid beginning to end coverage of Ajax...Rating: 5
14 May 2007 @ amazon.com
Finding a book on Ajax isn’t too hard any more. Finding one that covers beginning to advanced Ajax (and does it well) is another story. Steve Holzner has put his entry into the field with Ajax Bible. This is one of the better titles out there, and there’s something to appeal to all levels of developers.

Contents:
Part 1 - Fundamental Ajax: Essential Ajax; Know Your JavaScript; Creating Ajax Applications; Serious Ajax Programming
Part 2 - Ajax In Depth: Introducing Ajax Frameworks; More Advanced Ajax Frameworks; Using Server-Side Ajax Frameworks
Part 3 - Ajax and the DOM, XML, CSS, and Dynamic HTML: The DOM and Event Handling; XML and Ajax; Cascading Style Sheets and Ajax; Dynamic HTML and Ajax
Part 4 - Advanced Ajax: Introducing Ajax and PHP; PHP - Functions and HTML Controls; Handling User Input in PHP; Ajax and Security; Filters, MVC, and Ajax
Index

Holzner’s written over 100 technology books, so I’ve come to expect a high level of writing from him. He definitely delivers here. Part 1 gives you all the information you need to start writing an Ajax-enabled application. The JavaScript chapter is designed to give you enough background if you’ve never worked with Ajax before, but not so lengthy as to dominate the entire book. The Serious Ajax Programming chapter will appeal to readers who have done some Ajax coding already, covering such subjects as multiple XMLHttpRequest objects and calling other domains. Part 2 gets into the whole topic of frameworks and how they can save you time and effort in your coding projects. No need to reinvent the wheel if someone else already has done that. Part 3 covers more of how you can take the returned data from the Ajax call and format your web page to display and use that data. And finally, Part 4 goes into some fairly advanced topics that won’t mean much to the beginner, but might be exactly what the advanced developer needs.

What I especially liked are Holzner’s code examples. In many books, you get a code example all at once. The following writing then tries to explain whatever was just shown. That’s usually OK, but sometimes longer code snippets can get confusing. Holzner "builds" the code alongside the writing. So you first get the start and end of the function along with the explanation. Then you get that code along with a new bold section that explains the next step. This pattern is repeated until the entire code snippet is built. While some might feel that it pads the book with redundant pages of code, I prefer it as you see the specific part of the code being discussed without getting confused about additional lines you don’t yet understand.

If there was a need for me to recommend a book on Ajax to someone without knowing their background, this would be a very safe bet. Beginners will get exactly what they need, and intermediate/advanced readers will find stuff that they don’t know. Nice job...
Another winner - a fine AJAX ontributionRating: 5
10 May 2007 @ amazon.com
If you’re alive and into computer books, you’ve got to know the name Holzner. The fellow has got a talent for putting together a book that is always (at least the ones I read) at the top of the heap in terms of readability and content. He does it again in this book. This book is an enhanced version of his Ajax For Dummies, a very good and lower level book. There’s more in it.
AJAX for the un-initiated (are they out there ?) is the name given to the technique of using a bunch of already true and tried components, Javascript, XML, dynamic HTML, and CSS and the XMLHttpRequest object to obtain some rather dramatic effects toward creating websites that perform in a crisp way.
As in snap, crackle and pop. AJAX is not a language, it is not a new technology. It is a novel way of using the above mentioned already existing stuff in a very clever way. As such, you need to learn an awful lot of stuff and to learn how it all hangs together. And this is where the author excels. He has already written other books where this stuff is described. He brings it into this book from scratch and does a very good job of tying it all up into a nice neat package. The book is self-contained. It is a very good book for the beginner and the more advanced reader will find some interesting reading too.
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