Ajax is one of the latest and greatest ways to improve users' online experience and create new and innovative web functionality. By allowing specific parts of a web page to be displayed without refreshing the entire page, Ajax significantly enhances the experience of web applications. It also lets web developers create intuitive and innovative interaction processes.
Ajax for Web Application Developers provides the in-depth working knowledge of Ajax that web developers need to take their web applications to the next level. I will show you how to create an Ajax-driven web application from an object-oriented perspective, and it includes discussion of several useful Ajax design patterns.
This detailed Ajax Training covers the creation of connections to a MySQL database with PHP 5 via a custom Ajax engine and shows how to gracefully format the response with CSS, JavaScript, and XHTML while keeping the data tightly secure. It also covers the use of four custom Ajax-enabled components in an application and how to create each of them from scratch.
This AJAX Training combines the individual code examples and techniques, Ajax-driven application an internal web mail application that can be used in any user-based application, such as a community-based web application. You will learn not only how to create and use their own reusable Ajax components in this application
but also how to connect their components to any future Ajax applications that they might build.
Ajax for Web Application Developers
Labels: AJAX Introduction
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Ajax Training Video Clips
- AJAX Introduction
- AJAX System Requirements
- Getting to know Ajax
- Modifying Web Pages on the Fly
- Searching in Real Time with Live Searches
- Getting the Answer With Autocomplete
- Dragging and Dropping HTML Elements With Ajax
- Getting Instant Login Feedback
- Working With JavaScript in Browsers
- Creating an XMLHttpRequest Object in JavaScript
- Checking the XMLHttpRequest Object's readyState property
- Checking the XMLHttpRequest Object's status property - 12
- Getting Your Data With the XMLHttpRequest Object - 13
- Problems creating an XMLHttpRequest Object -Ajax tutorial 14
- Fetching Text Data From the Browser - Ajax training 15
- Decoding the Fetched Data - Ajax Tutorial - 16
- Selecting Relative or Absolute URLs - Ajax tutorial - 17
- Getting XMLHttpRequest Objects in Other Ways Ajaxtutorial 18
- Using Server-Side Scripting - Ajaxtraining.blogspot.com -19
- Storing Ajax Data in XML - Ajaxtraining.blogspot.com - 20
- Fetching XML Data From the Server - Ajax Training - 21
- Extracting Data From XML - ajaxtraining.blogspot.com - 22
- Passing Data to the Server with GET - AJAX TUTORIAL - 23
- Passing Data to the Server with POST - Ajax Training - 24
- Determining Which Browser the User Has - Ajax training 25
- Handling Head Requests for More Data - Ajax training 26
- Creating a Live Search Part.1 - Live Search using Google
- Creating a Live Search Part.2 - 28 Using Live Google Search
- Connecting to Google Suggest - Live Google Search - Ajax Training 29
- Calling a Different Domain Safely - Getting Ajax Power - 30
- Using Two XMLHttpRequest objects - Ajax tutorial - 31
- Handling Multiple XMLHttpRequest Requests - Ajax Power - 32
- Returning JavaScript Objects From the Server AjaxTutorial 33
- Downloading Images Using Ajax - Ajax Tutorial 34
- Creating a Shopping Cart - Buy item by dragging it to the shopping cart
- Handling Mouse Events - Ajax Tutorial 36
- Enabling Dragging Using Ajax | Ajax Tutorial 37
- Handling Drops - Ajax Tutorial 38
- Communicating With the Shopping Cart on the Server - 39
- Creating an Ajax-driven Drop-down Menu System - 40

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