Asynchronous JavaScript and XML can make your business Web pages more responsive and interactive. AJAX technology allows site visitors to use drop-down menus and other controls to trigger actions ...
If you’ve used Google Maps, Gmail or Microsoft’s Outlook Web Access, you’re familiar with the power of AJAX, which gives Web applications the responsiveness that users associate with desktop ...
In modern web development, AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a technique that allows web applications to communicate with a server asynchronously, retrieving and sending data without ...
Interactive Web pages, long dreamed of by designers, are finally here—Web interfaces that respond instantly to user commands, with minimal page redraw. All this and more is possible via Ajax ...
The rapid spread of the term AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) — from Weblog to Wall Street Journal within weeks! — might lead developers to assume it’s a breakthrough that heralds the death of ...
As I mentioned on January 10th, I'm going through a stack of AJAX books. The first of the bunch is AJAX: Creating Web Pages with Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, by Edmond Woychowsky (Prentice-Hall, ...
The foundation that makes AJAX possible is the communication layer with the server. The most complete option for performing this communication is the JavaScript XMLHttpRequest object. If ...
Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) means many things to many people. However, one thing is certain: To users it implies a higher level of functionality and an improved experience. To the developer ...
jQuery is an open-sourced JavaScript library that simplifies creation and navigation of web applications. Specifically, jQuery simplifies HTML Document Object Model (DOM) manipulation, Asynchronous ...
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