In chapter 1 we take a brief historical tour and explore the roots of Ajax itself, and then address why it’s important and how GWT can help. We also cover the basic tools and terminology involved in GWT. Chapter 2 starts with an exclusively client-side example that reinforces some of the basic GWT tenets and stresses a few new points, such as the fact that in GWT a lot more than the view exists on the client. This is where GWT differs from many other web toolkits—it allows a true Model View Controller (MVC) architectural approach to be used in a browser-based application.
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Read more about this free ebooks:GWT in practice - manning
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Chapter 1, “Why GWT?” lays out the GWT value proposition. We’ll look at the problems that GWT was created to help solve. Chapter 2, “Getting Started,” is where we’ll write our first GWT code together. We’ll mimic a sample application from a ebook on pure JavaScript, and we’ll show how a GWT edition of this simple application improves on the original. Chapter 3, “Designing ToCollege.net,” will provide a broad overview of the ToCollege.net application. |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Pro Web 2.0 Application Development with GWT
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Coding the Front End The most important aspects of Web standards-based Web sites are the separation of content and structure (HTML or XHTML) from presentation (CSS) and behavior (JavaScript). These key characteristics are by far the most critical ones, and will help provide most of the advantages of standards-based code, in particular easier site maintenance. Presenting Cascading Style Sheets The presentation layer in Web standards-based Web sites is controlled by |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Adapting to Web Standards CSS and Ajax for Big Sites
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Part I,“Using PHP,” provides an overview of the main parts of the PHP language with examples. Each example is a real-world example used in building an e-commerce site rather than “toy” code.We kick off this section with Chapter 1,“PHP Crash Course.” If you’ve already used PHP, you can whiz through this chapter. If you are new to PHP or new to programming, you might want to spend a little more time on it. Even if you are quite familiar with PHP, you will want to read Chapter 6,“Object-Oriented PHP,” because the object-oriented functionality has changed significantly in PHP5.
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Read more about this free ebooks:PHP and MySQL Web Development third edition
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How to transform raw data into knowledge—and empower businesses with a significant competitive edge! What is a “data warehouse?” It’s a database that’s structured to support business decision making. A data warehouse organizes, analyzes, and synthesizes huge amounts of raw data—so that it’s intelligible and useful to employees. Until recently, all that data would be stored in centralized, monolithic storage media. It was cumbersome to manage, slow to operate, and expensive to maintain.
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Read more about this free ebooks:Distributed Data Warehousing Using Web Technology
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