Ajax in Action (Paperback)

Dave Crane, Eric Pascarello, Darren James

  • 出版商: Manning
  • 出版日期: 2005-11-03
  • 售價: $1,680
  • 貴賓價: 9.5$1,596
  • 語言: 英文
  • 頁數: 680
  • 裝訂: Paperback
  • ISBN: 1932394613
  • ISBN-13: 9781932394610
  • 相關分類: Ajax
  • 海外代購書籍(需單獨結帳)

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Description

Web users are getting tired of the traditional web experience. They get frustrated losing their scroll position; they get annoyed waiting for refresh; they struggle to reorient themselves on every new page. And the list goes on. With asynchronous JavaScript and XML, known as "Ajax," you can give them a better experience. Once users have experienced an Ajax interface, they hate to go back. Ajax is new way of thinking that can result in a flowing and intuitive interaction with the user.

Ajax in Action helps you implement that thinking--it explains how to distribute the application between the client and the server (hint: use a "nested MVC" design) while retaining the integrity of the system. You will learn how to ensure your app is flexible and maintainable, and how good, structured design can help avoid problems like browser incompatibilities. Along the way it helps you unlearn many old coding habits. Above all, it opens your mind to the many advantages gained by placing much of the processing in the browser. If you are a web developer who has prior experience with web technologies, this book is for you.

 

Table of Contents

preface xix
acknowledgments xxi
about this book xxiv

Part 1 Rethinking the web application 1

1 A new design for the Web 3
1.1 Why Ajax rich clients? 5
Comparing the user experiences 5
Network latency 9
Asynchronous interactions 12
Sovereign and transient usage patterns 15
Unlearning the Web 16
1.2 The four defining principles of Ajax 17
The browser hosts an application, not content 17
The server delivers data, not content 19
User interaction with the application can be fluid and continuous 21
This is real coding and requires discipline 23
1.3 Ajax rich clients in the real world 24
Surveying the field 24
Google Maps 25
1.4 Alternatives to Ajax 28
Macromedia Flash-based solutions 28
Java Web Start and related technologies 28
1.5 Summary 29
1.6 Resources 30
 
2 First steps with Ajax 31
2.1 The key elements of Ajax 32
2.2 Orchestrating the user experience with JavaScript 34
2.3 Defining look and feel using CSS 36
CSS selectors 37
CSS style properties 39
A simple CSS example 40
2.4 Organizing the view using the DOM 45
Working with the DOM using JavaScript 47
Finding a DOM node 49
Creating a DOM node 50
Adding styles to your document 51
A shortcut: Using the innerHTML property 53
2.5 Loading data asynchronously using XML technologies 53
IFrames 54
XmlDocument and XMLHttpRequest objects 56
Sending a request to the server 58
Using callback functions to monitor the request 61
The full lifecycle 62
2.6 What sets Ajax apart 65
2.7 Summary 67
2.8 Resources 68
 
3 Introducing order to Ajax 69
3.1 Order out of chaos 71
Patterns: Creating a common vocabulary 71
Refactoring and Ajax 72
Keeping a sense of proportion 73
Refactoring in action 73
3.2 Some small refactoring case studies 77
Cross-browser inconsistencies: Façade and Adapter patterns 77
Managing event handlers: Observer pattern 80
Reusing user action handlers: Command pattern 83
Keeping only one reference to a resource: Singleton pattern 87
3.3 Model-View-Controller 91
3.4 Web server MVC 93
The Ajax web server tier without patterns 93
Refactoring the domain model 96
Separating content from presentation 100
3.5 Third-party libraries and frameworks 103
Cross-browser libraries 104
Widgets and widget suites 108
Application frameworks 111
3.6 Summary 114
3.7 Resources 115

 

Part 2 Core techniques 117

4 The page as an application 119
4.1 A different kind of MVC 120
Repeating the pattern at different scales 120
Applying MVC in the browser 122
4.2 The View in an Ajax application 124
Keeping the logic out of the View 124
Keeping the View out of the logic 130
4.3 The Controller in an Ajax application 134
Classic JavaScript event handlers 134
The W3C event model 137
Implementing a flexible event model in JavaScript 138
4.4 Models in an Ajax application 143
Using JavaScript to model the business domain 144
Interacting with the server 145
4.5 Generating the View from the Model 147
Reflecting on a JavaScript object 147
Dealing with arrays and objects 151
Adding a Controller 154
4.6 Summary 157
4.7 Resources 158
 
5 The role of the server 159
5.1 Working with the server side 160
5.2 Coding the server side 161
Popular implementation languages 161
N-tier architectures 162
Maintaining client-side and server-side domain models 163
5.3 The big picture: common server-side designs 164
Naive web server coding without a framework 164
Working with Model2 workflow frameworks 166
Working with component-based frameworks 167
Working with service-oriented architectures 170
5.4 The details: exchanging data 174
Client-only interactions 175
Introducing the planet browser example 175
Thinking like a web page: content-centric interactions 178
Thinking like a plug-in: script-centric interactions 182
Thinking like an application: data-centric interactions 188
5.5 Writing to the server 193
Using HTML forms 193
Using the XMLHttpRequest object 195
Managing user updates effectively 197
5.6 Summary 206
5.7 Resources 207

 

Part 3 Professional Ajax 209

6 The user experience 211
6.1 Getting it right: building a quality application 212
Responsiveness 213
Robustness 213
Consistency 214
Simplicity 215
Making it work 215
6.2 Keeping the user informed 216
Handling responses to our own requests 216
Handling updates from other users 218
6.3 Designing a notification system for Ajax 222
Modeling notifications 223
Defining user interface requirements 225
6.4 Implementing a notification framework 226
Rendering status bar icons 226
Rendering detailed notifications 229
Putting the pieces together 230
6.5 Using the framework with network requests 237
6.6 Indicating freshness of data 241
Defining a simple highlighting style 241
Highlighting with the Scriptaculous Effects library 243
6.7 Summary 244
6.8 Resources 245
 
7 Security and Ajax 246
7.1 JavaScript and browser security 247
Introducing the “server of origin” policy 248
Considerations for Ajax 248
Problems with subdomains 249
Cross-browser security 250
7.2 Communicating with remote services 251
Proxying remote services 252
Working with web services 253
7.3 Protecting confidential data 263
The man in the middle 263
Using secure HTTP 264
Encrypting data over plain HTTP using JavaScript 266
7.4 Policing access to Ajax data streams 268
Designing a secure web tier 268
Restricting access to web data 272
7.5 Summary 277
7.6 Resources 278
 
8 Performance 279
8.1 What is performance? 280
8.2 JavaScript execution speed 281
Timing your application the hard way 282
Using the Venkman profiler 288
Optimizing execution speed for Ajax 289
8.3 JavaScript memory footprint 302
Avoiding memory leaks 302
Special considerations for Ajax 306
8.4 Designing for performance 311
Measuring memory footprint 312
A simple example 316
Results: how to reduce memory footprint 150-fold 321
8.5 Summary 323
8.6 Resources 324

 

Part 4 Ajax by example 325

9 Dynamic double combo 327
9.1 A double-combo script 328
Limitations of a client-side solution 328
Limitations of a server-side solution 329
Ajax-based solution 330
9.2 The client-side architecture 331
Designing the form 331
Designing the client/server interactions 333
9.3 Implementing the server: VB .NET 334
Defining the XML response format 335
Writing the server-side code 336
9.4 Presenting the results 339
Navigating the XML document 339
Applying Cascading Style Sheets 342
9.5 Advanced issues 343
Allowing multiple-select queries 343
Moving from a double combo to a triple combo 345
9.6 Refactoring 345
New and improved net.ContentLoader 346
Creating a double-combo component 352
9.7 Summary 359
 
10 Type-ahead suggest 361
10.1 Examining type-ahead frameworks 362
Type-ahead suggest frameworks 362
Google Suggest 364
The Ajax in Action type-ahead 365
10.2 The server-side framework: C# 366
The server and the database 366
Testing the server-side code 368
10.3 The client-side framework 369
The HTML 369
The JavaScript 370
Accessing the server 380
10.4 Adding functionality: multiple elements
with different queries 392
10.5 Refactoring 392
Day 1: developing the TextSuggest component game plan 394
Day 2: TextSuggest creation—clean and configurable 397
Day 3: Ajax enabled 401
Day 4: handling events 406
Day 5: the suggestions pop-up UI 413
Refactor debriefing 421
10.6 Summary 422
 
11 The enhanced Ajax web portal 423
11.1 The evolving portal 424
The classic portal 424
The rich user interface portal 426
11.2 The Ajax portal architecture using Java 427
11.3 The Ajax login 429
The user table 429
The server-side login code: Java 430
The client-side login framework 433
11.4 Implementing DHTML windows 439
The portal windows database 439
The portal window’s server-side code 441
Adding the JS external library 445
11.5 Adding Ajax autosave functionality 448
Adapting the library 448
Autosaving the information to the database 450
11.6 Refactoring 453
Defining the constructor 455
Adapting the AjaxWindows.js library 456
Specifying the portal commands 458
Performing the Ajax processing 462
Refactoring debrief 464
11.7 Summary 464
 
12 Live search using XSLT 466
12.1 Understanding the search techniques 467
Looking at the classic search 467
The flaws of the frame and pop-up methods 469
Examining a live search with Ajax and XSLT 470
Sending the results back to the client 472
12.2 The client-side code 473
Setting up the client 473
Initiating the process 474
12.3 The server-side code: PHP 476
Building the XML document 476
Building the XSLT document 479
12.4 Combining the XSLT and XML documents 481
Working with Microsoft Internet Explorer 483
Working with Mozilla 484
12.5 Completing the search 485
Applying a Cascading Style Sheet 485
Improving the search 487
Deciding to use XSLT 489
Overcoming the Ajax bookmark pitfall 490
12.6 Refactoring 491
An XSLTHelper 492
A live search component 496
Refactoring debriefing 501
12.7 Summary 501
 
13 Building stand-alone applications with Ajax 503
13.1 Reading information from the outside world 504
Discovering XML feeds 505
Examining the RSS structure 506
13.2 Creating the rich user interface 509
The process 510
The table-less HTML framework 511
Compliant CSS formatting 513
13.3 Loading the RSS feeds 518
Global scope 518
Ajax preloading functionality 520
13.4 Adding a rich transition effect 524
Cross-browser opacity rules 524
Implementing the fading transition 525
Integrating JavaScript timers 527
13.5 Additional functionality 528
Inserting additional feeds 529
Integrating the skipping and pausing functionality 531
13.6 Avoiding the project’s restrictions 534
Overcoming Mozilla’s security restriction 534
Changing the application scope 537
13.7 Refactoring 537
RSS reader Model 537
RSS reader view 541
RSS reader Controller 545
Refactoring debrief 558
13.8 Summary 559
appendix A The Ajax craftsperson’s toolkit 561
appendix B JavaScript for object-oriented programmers 589
appendix C Ajax frameworks and libraries 619
index 635

商品描述(中文翻譯)

描述

網絡用戶對傳統的網絡體驗感到厭倦。他們在滾動時失去位置感,等待刷新時感到煩惱,每次進入新頁面時都需要重新定位。這樣的問題還有很多。通過異步JavaScript和XML(稱為“Ajax”),您可以為用戶提供更好的體驗。一旦用戶體驗了Ajax界面,他們就不願意回到以前的方式。Ajax是一種新的思維方式,可以實現與用戶的流暢和直觀互動。

《Ajax實戰》幫助您實現這種思維-它解釋了如何在客戶端和服務器之間分配應用程序(提示:使用“嵌套MVC”設計),同時保持系統的完整性。您將學習如何確保應用程序具有靈活性和可維護性,以及良好的結構化設計如何幫助避免瀏覽器不兼容等問題。在此過程中,它幫助您放棄許多舊的編碼習慣。最重要的是,它開啟了您的思維,讓您意識到將大部分處理工作放在瀏覽器中所帶來的許多優勢。如果您是具有網絡技術先驗知識的網絡開發人員,這本書適合您。

目錄

前言
致謝
關於本書

第一部分 重新思考網絡應用程序

第1章 網絡的新設計
1.1 為什麼要使用Ajax豐富客戶端?
1.2 Ajax的四個定義原則
1.3 現實世界中的Ajax豐富客戶端
1.4 Ajax的替代方案
1.5 總結
1.6 資源

第2章 Ajax的第一步
2.1 Ajax的關鍵元素
2.2 使用JavaScript協調用戶體驗
2.3 使用CSS定義外觀和感覺

(以下省略)