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Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference
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Other links at JavaScript > Books |
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How to Do Everything with JavaScript
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This friendly, solutions-oriented guide is filled with step-by-step examples that illustrate how to write basic to advanced JavaScript applications, as well as modify existing scripts to suit individual needs. Each chapter begins with the specific how-to topics that will be covered. Within the chapter, each topic is accompanied by a solid, easy-to-follow walkthrough of the process. This book covers several topics not covered in other titles, including the new JavaScript 2.0, using JavaScript with DOM 1 and 2, and creating dynamic stylesheets.
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Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference
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This book is an indispensable compendium for Web content developers. It contains everything you need to create functional cross-platform Web applications, including: A complete reference for all of the HTML tags, CSS style attributes, browser document objects, and JavaScript objects supported by the various standards and the latest versions of Navigator and Internet Explorer. Browser compatibility is emphasized throughout; the reference pages clearly indicate browser support for every entity; Handy cross-reference indexes that make it easy to find interrelated HTML tags, style attributes, and document objects; An advanced introduction to creating dynamic Web content that addresses the cross-platform compromises inherent in Web page design today. If you have some experience with basic Web page creation, but are new to the world of dynamic content, Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference will jump-start your development efforts.
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JavaScript Programmers Reference
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This book is aimed at programmers who know and use JavaScript in their day-to-day work, and who need a reference guide to the details of the JavaScript language. It covers: JavaScript programming concepts and definitions explained, Includes core ECMAScript, JavaScript, and JScript language features, Coverage of DOM levels 1 and 2, Browser-specific implementation details, Detailed availability listings, including IE 5.5, Netscape 6, and Opera 5, and Server-side JavaScript and the Netscape Enterprise Server.
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Practical JavaScript for the Usable Web
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This is a new kind of JavaScript book. Its not cutnpaste, its not a reference, and its not an exhaustive investigation of the JavaScript language. It is about client-side, web-focused, and task-oriented JavaScript. Practical JavaScript for the Usable Web takes a two pronged approach to learning the JavaScript that you need to get your work done: teaching the core client-side JavaScript that you need to incorporate usable interactivity into your web applications, including many short functional scripts, and building up a complete application with shopping cart functionality.
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JavaScript: A Beginners Guide
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JavaScript is a client-side scripting language that allows you to add various features and effects to your web site and which also allows you to perform useful tasks such as form validation. This book is written in a style that allows both those with and without programming experience to learn the basics of JavaScript coding. The book has special features to help you grasp what you need to know in each chapter. Chapters begin with a set of goals, and include checkpoints along the way to test what you have covered. Also, there are projects that allow you to code scripts similar to those discussed in the chapter on your own and check your results in the browser or by looking at the downloadable code on this site. At the end of each chapter is a Mastery Check which asks you a few questions related to the content of the chapter, with answers in the appendix.
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