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ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD |
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ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD
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Download ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD
Category: AJAX
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EBook Description: JAX has brought a rich inactive content to web pages and web applications. The newest vision of Visual Studio, Visual Studio 2010 brings many plus to creating AJAX web content. This course covers some of the basics for using AJAX, dealing with server aide and client AJAX controls. Creating content rich AJAX applications will show how to use the UpdatePanel controls, page methods and other items. The AJAX Control Toolkit section will explain the controls, extenders, and script manager. The next part of the course explores the jQuery Library, which Microsoft has fully embraced as its client-side javascript library.
You'll learn about the library and how to put it to use, including how to write effective selectors to create matched sets of elements. Then you'll learn how to bring a page alive with jQuery, using features like changing page content, animating elements on the page, and using the jQuery UI Library for even more effects. One of the original motivations for jQuery was to support AJAX, and the library includes rich support for asynchronous calls to the server. You�ll also learn how to make use of various other jQuery extensions and see how to build your own plugin.
Prerequisites: This course assumes that you are familiar and experienced with Microsoft's .NET Framework and ASP.NET development tools. You should be familiar with Web development and understand how HTTP and HTML work to produce Web pages for the user. You should have experience writing applications with ASP.NET 3.5, 4.0, or later Web forms, and be familiar with how ASP.NET processes page requests, and have strong experience with .NET Framework 3.5, 4.0, or later programming. You should have experience with Visual Studio 2008, 2010, or later for building Web application projects. Experience with building database applications using these tools will be helpful, although not strictly necessary. You should also have some experience with writing javascript.
AJAX Fundamentals
Introducing AJAX
Essential javascript
Server and Client-Side AJAX
Server-Side AJAX: UpdatePanel and Related Controls
Partial Page Rendering
The ScriptManager Control
The UpdatePanel Control
Other Server-Side AJAX Controls
Creating Rich AJAX Applications
Using Multiple UpdatePanel Controls
Using Page Methods
AJAX History and the Browser Back Button
ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit
Introduction to the AJAX Control Toolkit
Toolkit Controls and Extenders
ToolkitScriptManager Control
The jQuery Library
jQuery for the ASP.NET Developer
Using jQuery
Selectors, Wrapped Sets and Chains
Bring a Web Page Alive with jQuery
Work with Page Elements
Use Animations and Effects
The jQuery User Interface Library
Using jQuery's AJAX Features
AJAX Made Simple with jQuery
GETs, POSTs and Data Formats
Taking Full Control with the AJAX Method
jQuery Extensions
jQuery Extensions in Microsoft's World
Building Your Own Extensions
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More and more Web sites are being rewritten as Ajax applications; even traditional desktop software is rapidly moving to the Web via Ajax. But, all too often, this transition is being made with reckless disregard for security. If Ajax applications aren�t designed and coded properly, they can be susceptible to far more dangerous security vulnerabilities than conventional Web or desktop software. Ajax developers desperately need guidance on securing their applications: knowledge that�s been virtually impossible to find, until now. Ajax Security systematically debunks today�s most dangerous myths about Ajax security, illustrating key points with detailed case studies of actual exploited Ajax vulnerabilities, ranging from MySpace�s Samy worm to MacWorld�s conference code validator. Even more important, it delivers specific, up-to-the-minute recommendations for securing Ajax applications in each major Web programming language and environment, including .NET, Java, PHP, and even Ruby on Rails. You�ll learn how to:
� Mitigate unique risks associated with Ajax, including overly granular Web services, application control flow tampering, and manipulation of program logic � Write new Ajax code more safely�and identify and fix flaws in existing code � Prevent emerging Ajax-specific attacks, including javascript hijacking and persistent storage theft � Avoid attacks based on XSS and SQL Injection�including a dangerous SQL Injection variant that can extract an entire backend database with just two requests � Leverage security built into Ajax frameworks like Prototype, Dojo, and ASP.NET AJAX Extensions�and recognize what you still must implement on your own � Create more secure �mashup� applications
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Ajax Hacks: Tips & Tools for Creating Responsive Web Sites
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 in the browser to process the web server response. Taking complete advantage of Ajax, however, requires something more than your typical "how-to" book. What it calls for is Ajax Hacks from O'Reilly. This valuable guide provides direct, hands-on solutions that take the mystery out of Ajax's many capabilities. Each hack represents a clever way to accomplish a specific task, saving you countless hours of searching for the right answer.
AJAX Web Development
Ajax is an acronym f Asynchronous javascript and XML, and at its heart is the XMLHTTPRequest object, which is part of the XML DOM (Document Object Model)
AJAX and jQuery
Description You want to create an AJAX application. Why would you use Django? Why would you use jQuery? Why would you use both together? Enter Django JavaScript Integration: AJAX and jQuery � your comprehensive answer to all these questions and the only extensive, practical, and hands-on guide to developing any AJAX application with Django and jQuery.
Gone are the days when you used to lament over the lack of official documentation on AJAX with Django. This book will teach you exactly why Django is called �The web framework for perfectionists with deadlines�, how jQuery � the �write less do more� JavaScript library � is practically a virtual higher-level language, and why they both deserve to be integrated with AJAX.
This hands-on-guide shows you how to put Django and jQuery together in the process of creating an AJAX application. In this book, they are brought together in a real-world scenario, with attention to usability, to build and develop an AJAX application.
The first two chapters provide a short and necessary introduction to the world of Django, jQuery, and AJAX; and the remaining chapters are based on a case study that will make you realize the immense potential and benefits of integrating Django and jQuery with your AJAX application.
By the time you are done with this book, you�ll be developing your AJAX applications with Django and jQuery in less time than you can say �integrate�.
You will cover the basics of AJAX; use jQuery, the commonest JavaScript library, on the client side, and learn form validation with an eye to usability, build things with Django on the server-side, handle login and authentication via Django-based AJAX, and then dip into the rich jQuery plugin ecosystem to build in-place editing into your pages. You will add auto-complete functionality courtesy of jQuery UI, easily build forms with Django ModelForm, and then look at a client-side search implementation that can look things up without network access after initial download. You will learn to Implement a simple, expandable undo system, and offer more full-blooded account management, tinker, fix some bugs, offer a more usable way to handle password input, add local time support for people who are not in your time zone, look at usability, and finally take a look at debugging.
After working through this book, you will have both an AJAX application and a deep understanding that you can use to customize, extend, and further develop it in your organization.
This book has been written and tested for Django v 1.2.3 and jQuery v 1.4.4.
What you will learn from this book :
* Learn how and why, for certain kinds of web development, Django is more �Pythonic� than Python * Understand whet the XMLHttpRequest Object is and how to implement it in various browsers * Embed JavaScript in Django templates * Learn account creation and login creation using AJAX * Build forms using Django models * Embed jQuery auto-complete plugins in your Django templates * Validate form input on the server side using AJAX * Integrate jQuery sliders into your Django template * Minify JavaScript files and also learn the pros and cons of doing so
Approach This book will teach you how to enrich your AJAX applications with Django and jQuery in a practical manner with minimum fuss. It introduces AJAX basics, gets a little deeper, and then goes chapter-by-chapter through a carefully chosen case study. It demonstrates how different pieces of a Django AJAX application work in themselves and are put together and specifically leads you through building an intranet employee photo directory with social networking features.
Professional Ajax
provides a developer-level tutorial of Ajax techniques, patterns, and use cases. The book begins by exploring the roots of Ajax, covering how the evolution of the web and new technologies directly led to the development of Ajax techniques. A detailed discussion of how frames, JavaScript, cookies, XML, and XMLHttp requests (XHR) related to Ajax is included. After this introduction, the book moves on to cover the implementation of specific Ajax techniques. Request brokers such as hidden frames, dynamic iframes, and XHR are compared and contrasted, explaining when one method should be used over another. To make this discussion clearer, a brief overview of HTTP requests and responses is included.
Once a basic understanding of the various request types is discussed, the book moves on to provide in-depth examples of how and when to use Ajax in a web site or web application. Different data transmission formats, including plain text, HTML, XML, and JSON are discussed for their advantages and disadvantages. Also included is a discussion on web services and how they may be used to perform Ajax techniques. Next, more complex topics are covered. A chapter introducing a request management framework explores how to manage all of the requests inside of an Ajax application. Ajax debugging techniques are also discussed.
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The MS Ajax 4
AJAX is an exciting Web platform for many reasons. Using AJAX, many tasks that were traditionally performed on the server happen in the browser instead, resulting in fewer round-trips to the server, lower bandwidth consumption, and faster, more responsive Web UIs. While these outcomes are the result of offloading a good deal of work to the client, the browser still isn’t the environment of choice for many developers who would rather have the full power and flexibility of server apps at their disposal.
Ajax Patterns and Best Practices
Ajax Patterns and Best Practices
Ajax is taking us into the next generation of web applications. Ajax has broken the client-server barrier by decoupling the client from the server, but an Ajax application still needs a server to extract content from. The most effective use of Ajax and the server requires an understanding of REST, an architectural style used to define Web services.
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This is an ideal book whether or not you have already created an Ajax application. Because the book outlines various patterns and best practices, you can quickly check and verify that you're building an efficient Ajax application.
Inside the book, the patterns will answer the following questions:
* What is Ajax, and REST and why do you even care? And if I should care what are some examples of websites that make effective use of Ajax and REST? * What are the absolute basics of Ajax and REST and what parts of those basics should I use? * How should deal with large amounts of data? Should I cache the data? Should I get the data piece fed to me? (Patterns: Cache Controller, and Infinite Data) * People keep telling me that sessions and cookies are bad? Are they bad? What should I do? And while I think about how about generating content for other devices? (Permutations pattern) * I want to fix the back-button problem of the HTML browser. (State Navigation pattern) * What is the best way to create a mashup? (REST Based Model View Controller pattern) * My page has so many links managed by JavaScript, and I am loosing control, help me make this more organized! (Decoupled Navigation pattern) * I understand that HTTP means I send data to the server, how about the server sending me some data without asking for it? (Persistent Communications pattern) * My server side code looks like a mess with tags and code pieces everywhere how can I organize and make my HTML page behave like a SOA client and use REST based web services? (Content chunking pattern)
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AJAX has brought a rich inactive content to web pages and web applications. The newest vision of Visual Studio, Visual Studio 2010 brings many plus to creating AJAX web content. This course covers some of the basics for using AJAX, dealing with server aide and client AJAX controls. Creating content rich AJAX applications will show how to use the UpdatePanel controls, page methods and other items. The AJAX Control Toolkit section will explain the controls, extenders, and script manager.
The next part of the course explores the jQuery Library, which Microsoft has fully embraced as its client-side javascript library. You'll learn about the library and how to put it to use, including how to write effective selectors to create matched sets of elements. Then you'll learn how to bring a page alive with jQuery, using features like changing page content, animating elements on the page, and using the jQuery UI Library for even more effects. One of the original motivations for jQuery was to support AJAX, and the library includes rich support for asynchronous calls to the server. You�ll also learn how to make use of various other jQuery extensions and see how to build your own plugin.
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AJAX Fundamentals
Introducing AJAX Essential javascript Server and Client-Side AJAX
Server-Side AJAX: UpdatePanel and Related Controls
Partial Page Rendering The ScriptManager Control The UpdatePanel Control Other Server-Side AJAX Controls
Creating Rich AJAX Applications
Using Multiple UpdatePanel Controls Using Page Methods AJAX History and the Browser Back Button
ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit
Introduction to the AJAX Control Toolkit Toolkit Controls and Extenders ToolkitScriptManager Control
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jQuery for the ASP.NET Developer Using jQuery Selectors, Wrapped Sets and Chains
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Work with Page Elements Use Animations and Effects The jQuery User Interface Library
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The practicing programmers DEITEL guide to AJAX, Rich Internet Applications, and web application development
This book applies the Deitel signature live code approach to teaching Web 2.0 application development. The book presents concepts in the context of more than 180 fully tested programs (18,000+ lines of code), complete with syntax shading, detailed descriptions, and sample outputs. It features hundreds of tips that will help you build robust applications.
Start with a concise introduction to XHTML, CSS, and javascript before rapidly moving on to more advanced client side development with DOM, XML, AJAX, JSON, and other RIA technologies. Then proceed to server side development with web servers, databases, PHP, Ruby on Rails, ASP.NET, JavaServer Faces, and web services. When youre finished, youll have everything you need to build Web 2.0 applications.
The DEITEL Developer Series is designed for practicing programmers. The series presents focused treatments of emerging technologies, including .NET, JavaTM, web services, Internet and web development, and more.
Practical, example rich coverage of:
Web 2.0 XHTML, CSS, javascript DOM, XML, RSS AJAX Enabled Rich Internet Applications JSON, Dojo, Script.aculo.us Adobe Flash CS3 and Flex Web Servers (IIS and Apache) Database (SQL, MySQL, ADO.NET and Java DB) PHP, Ruby on Rails ASP.NET, ASP.NET AJAX JavaServer Faces (JSF) SOAP Based Web Services in Java REST Based Web Services in ASP.NET Mashups And more
Head Rush Ajax
Head Rush Ajax Publisher: OReilly Media, Inc. | March 28, 2006 | 446 pages | English | ISBN 10: 0596102259 | 36.1 MB
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 web sites into smooth, slick, responsive applications that make your users feel like theyre 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 generations instruction book? You need a learning experience thats as compelling and cutting edge as the sites you want to design. Thats where we come in. With Head Rush Ajax, in no time youll be writing javascript code that fires off asynchronous requests to web serversand having fun doing it. By the time youve taken your dynamic HTML, XML, JSON, and DOM skills up a few notches, youll 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 have 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 PROJECT: CHAOS stealth team, and even settle the question of the Top 5 Blues CDs of all time. Leave boring, clunky web sites behind with 8 tracks and hot pants�and get going with next generationweb programming.
If you thought Ajax was rocket science, this book is for you. Head Rush Ajax puts dynamic, compelling experiences within reach for every web developer. Jesse James Garrett, Adaptive Path
A technology meets reality book for web pioneers on the cutting edge. Valentin Crettaz, CTO, Condris Technologies
ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD - Free eBook ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD - Download ebook ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX and jQuery Using Visual Basic 2010 DVD free
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