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Este livro demonstra de forma prática, didática, objetiva e divertida como funciona e como usar Ajax para criar sites atraentes e divertidos.
Sick of creating web sites that reload every time a user moves the mouse? Tired of servers that wait around to respond to users’ requests for movie tickets? It sounds like you need a little (or maybe a lot of) Ajax in your life. Asynchronous programming lets you turn your own websites into smooth, slick, responsive applications that make your users feel like they’re back on the information superhighway, not stuck on a dial-up backroad.
But who wants to take on next-generation web programming with the last generation’s instruction book? You need a learning experience that’s as compelling and cutting-edge as the sites you want to design. That’s where we come in. With Head Rush Ajax, in no time you’ll be writing JavaScript code that fires off asynchronous requests to web servers...and having fun doing it. By the time you’ve taken your dynamic HTML, XML, JSON, and DOM skills up a few notches, you’ll have solved tons of puzzles, figured out how well snowboards sell in Vail, and even watched a boxing match. Sound interesting? Then what are you waiting for? Pick up Head Rush Ajax and learn Ajax and asynchronous programming the right way--the way that sticks.
If you’ve ever read a Head First book, you know what to expect: a visually rich format designed for the way your brain works. Head Rush ramps up the intensity with an even faster look and feel. Have your first working app before you finish Chapter 1, meet up with the nefarious PROJEC: CHAOST stealth team, and even settle the question of the Top 5 Blues CDs of all time. Leave boring, clunky websites behind with 8-tracks and hot pants--and get going with next-generation web programming.
About the authors:
Brett McLaughlin has worked in computers since the Logo days (remember the little triangle?). In recent years, he’s become one of the most well-known authors and programmers in the Java and XML communities. He’s worked for Nextel Communications, implementing complex enterprise systems, at Lutris Technologies, actually writing application servers, and most recently at O’Reilly Media, Inc., where he continues to write and edit books that matter. His most recent book, Java 1.5 Tiger: A Developer’s Notebook, is the first book available on the newest version of Java, and his classic Java and XML remains one of the definitive works on using XML technologies in Java.
Intro 1 Using Ajax: web applications for a new generation 2 Speaking the Language: making ajax requests Interlude 3 She Blinded Me with Asynchrony: asynchronous apps 4 Web Page Forestry: the document object model 4.5 A Second Helping: devloping dom applications 5 Saying More with POST: post requests Interlude 6 More Than Words Can Say: xml requests and responses 7 A Fight to the Finish: json versus xml Appendix 1: A Few Special Bonus Gifts: extras Appendix 2: “All I Want Is the Code”: ajax and dom utilities Index