Enterprise AJAX, Strategies for Building High Performance Web Applications (2008)
WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?
Enterprise AJAX has been written with intermediate-to-advanced serverside
developers in mind (Java, object-oriented PHP, or ASP.NET). Many
of the concepts in the book have been adopted from the time honored software
engineering patterns introduced by the “gang of four” (that is, Erich
Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides, authors of
Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
[Addison-Wesley Professional]). Readers would benefit from a basic
understanding of software design patterns, or at least an interest in learning
more about them because they are applied throughout the book. We
hope that delivering AJAX in a familiar way using patterns can help
the more experienced developer understand the concepts and ideas more
easily.
Perhaps more important than understanding patterns, you should ideally
have at least a basic knowledge of JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. Even
some understanding of XML, XSLT, or JSON can be helpful, although not
essential. Furthermore, we expect that you are experienced with serverside
programming in an object-oriented language such as Java, C#, or PHP.
WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?
Enterprise AJAX has been written with intermediate-to-advanced serverside
developers in mind (Java, object-oriented PHP, or ASP.NET). Many
of the concepts in the book have been adopted from the time honored software
engineering patterns introduced by the “gang of four” (that is, Erich
Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides, authors of
Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
[Addison-Wesley Professional]). Readers would benefit from a basic
understanding of software design patterns, or at least an interest in learning
more about them because they are applied throughout the book. We
hope that delivering AJAX in a familiar way using patterns can help
the more experienced developer understand the concepts and ideas more
easily.
Perhaps more important than understanding patterns, you should ideally
have at least a basic knowledge of JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. Even
some understanding of XML, XSLT, or JSON can be helpful, although not
essential. Furthermore, we expect that you are experienced with serverside
programming in an object-oriented language such as Java, C#, or PHP.
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