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 Async JavaScript: Build More Responsive Apps with Less Code
Originally devised to enhance web pages in Netscape 2.0, JavaScript is now
faced with being a single-threaded language in a multimedia, multitasking,
multicore world. Yet JavaScript has not only persevered since 1995, it’s
thrived. One after the other, potential rivals in the browser—Flash, Silverlight,
and Java... |  |  Pro HTML5 Performance (Professional Apress)
This book deals with creating high-performance web sites. Its focus is large and high-volume sites. We met while working for a company whose web site has upwards of 50,000 pages and gets more than 80,000,000 visitors a month (many more during the holiday shopping season). The advice the book gives, however, applies equally to smaller sites,... |  |  HTML5 and JavaScript Web Apps
HTML5 and JavaScript Web Apps is about building web applications with HTML5 and
W3C specifications that are widely supported across all devices and browsers. It is intended
for programmers who are facing the challenges of moving more code to the
frontend with JavaScript, CSS, and HTML, while at the same time ... |
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 Head First Mobile Web (Brain-Friendly Guides)
Mobile web usage is exploding. Soon, more web browsing will take place on phones and tablets than PCs. Your business needs a mobile strategy, but where do you start? Head First Mobile Web shows how to use the web tech- nology you’re already familiar with to make sites and apps that work on any device of any size. Put... |  |  JavaScript Web Applications
JavaScript has come a long way from its humble beginnings in 1995 as part of the Netscape browser, to the high-performance JIT interpreters of today. Even just five years ago developers were blown away by Ajax and the yellow fade technique; now, complex JavaScript apps run into the hundreds of thousands of lines.
In the last year,... |  |  Flash Professional CS5 for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide
Adobe Flash Professional CS5 is the latest version of the enormously popular web design tool. In its original incarnation, Flash gave web designers an efficient way to send artwork and animation over limitedbandwidth connections. Flash’s claim to fame was its ability to deliver vector images over the web, making download times shorter.... |
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 Moodle JavaScript Cookbook
Moodle is the best e-learning solution on the block and is revolutionizing courses on the Web. Using JavaScript in Moodle is very useful for administrators and dynamic developers, as it uses built-in libraries to provide the modern and dynamic experience that is expected by web users today.
The Moodle JavaScript Cookbook will take... |  |  JavaScript: The Missing Manual
Not too long ago, the Web was a pretty boring place. Constructed from plain old
HTML, Web pages displayed information and not much else. Folks would click a
link and then wait for a new Web page to load—and that was about as interactive
as it got.
These days, most Web sites are almost as responsive as the... |  |  Using FileMaker Bento
Bento is a product from FileMaker, which is owned by Apple. Designed to bring
FileMaker’s database expertise to users of Mac OS X Leopard and later, it integrates
data from iPhoto, iCal, Mail, and Address Book with databases that you can create
from your own data as well as data imported from other sources.
Bento is... |
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 Android Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach
Android is hot, and many people are developing Android applications (apps for short).
Perhaps you would also like to develop apps, but are unsure about how to get started.
Although you could study Google’s online Android Developer’s Guide
(http://developer.android.com/guide/index.html) to acquire the needed knowledge,
you... |  |  Meet the iPad 2
Given Apple’s advertising budget and ubiquitous ads, plus an enormous amount of media attention, it’s still difficult to determine just what an iPad is. Is it a media player or a business machine? Does it replace a laptop? There are other tablet computers on the market, as well as “netbooks” that act like... |  |  Xcode 4 (Developer Reference)
After a few years with Xcode 3, my first impressions of Xcode 4 were mixed. At first, I thought the redesign was unnecessarily rigid and proscriptive. I missed Interface Builder's floating windows and object palettes, and I couldn't find a convincing reason for the enforced three-way window split in the editor.
Over time, I... |
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