In today's Web 2.0 world, JavaScript and Dynamic HTML
are at the center of the hot new approach to designing
highly interactive pages on the client side. With this
environment in mind, the new edition of this book offers
bite-sized solutions to very specific scripting problems
that web developers commonly face. Each recipe includes
a focused piece of code that you can insert right into
your application. Why is ''JavaScript & DHTML
Cookbook'' so popular? After reading thousands of forum
threads over the years, author and scripting pioneer
Danny Goodman has compiled a list of problems that
frequently vex scripters of various experience levels.
For every problem he addresses, Goodman not only offers
code, but a discussion of how and why the solution
works.Recipes range from simple tasks, such as
manipulating strings and validating dates in JavaScript,
to entire libraries that demonstrate complex tasks, such
as cross-browser positioning of HTML elements, sorting
tables, and implementing Ajax features on the
client.Ideal for novices as well as experienced
scripters, this book contains more than 150 recipes for:
working with interactive forms and style sheets;
presenting user-friendly page navigation; creating
dynamic content via Document Object Model scripting;
producing visual effects for stationary content;
positioning HTML elements; and working with XML data in
the browser.Recipes in this Cookbook are compatible with
the latest W3C standards and browsers, including
Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 2, Safari, and Opera 9.
Several new recipes provide client-side Ajax solutions,
and many recipes from the previous edition have been
revised to help you build extensible user interfaces for
Web 2.0 applications. If you want to write your own
scripts and understand how they work, rather than rely
on a commercial web development framework, the
''JavaScript & DHTML Cookbook'' is a must. |
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