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Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One
 
 

Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One [Paperback]

Phil Ballard , Michael Moncur
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

In just a short time, you can learn how to use Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP to create interactive interfaces to your web applications by combining these powerful technologies.

 

No previous Ajax programming experience is required. Using a straightforward, step-by-step approach, each lesson in this book builds on the previous ones, enabling you to learn the essentials of Ajax programming with JavaScript, PHP, and related technologies from the ground up.

 

Regardless of whether you run Linux, Windows, or Mac OS X, the enclosed CD includes a complete Ajax programming starter kit that gives you all the programming tools, reference information, JavaScript libraries, and server software you need to set up a stable environment for learning, testing, and production.

 

Learn how to…

  • Build better, more interactive interfaces for your web applications
  • Make JavaScript, HTML, XML, and PHP work together to create Ajax effects
  • Compile an Ajax application
  • Create and consume web services with SOAP and REST
  • Avoid common errors and troubleshoot programs
  • Use popular Ajax libraries to speed up and improve common programming tasks

 

On the CD

  • XAMPP for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux—an easy-to-install package to set up a PHP- and MySQL-enabled Apache server on your computer
  • The jEdit programming editor for Windows, Mac, and Linux
  • Prototype, Scriptaculous, Rico, and XOAD—popular JavaScript libraries for creating Ajax applications and effects
  • A complete Ajax, HTML, XML, and PHP tutorial reference library in searchable PDF format
  • Source code for the examples in the book

 

Phil Ballard is a software engineering consultant and developer specializing in website and intranet design and development for an international portfolio of clients. He has an honors degree from the University of Leeds, England, and has worked for several years in commercial and managerial roles in the high technology sector.

 

Michael Moncur is a freelance webmaster and author. He runs a network of websites and has written several bestselling books about web development, networking, certification programs, and databases.

 

Category: Web Development

Covers: Ajax, JavaScript and PHP

User Level: Beginning–Intermediate 

About the Author

Phil Ballard, the author of Sams Teach Yourself Ajax in 10 Minutes, graduated in 1980 with an honors degree in electronics from the University of Leeds, England. Following an early career as a research scientist with a major multinational, he spent a few years in commercial and managerial roles within the high technology sector, later working full time as a software engineering consultant. Operating as “The Mouse Whisperer” (http://www.mousewhisperer.co.uk), Ballard has spent recent years involved solely in website and intranet design and development for an international portfolio of clients.

 

Michael Moncur is a freelance webmaster and author. He runs a network of websites, including the Web’s oldest site about famous quotations, online since 1994. He wrote Sams Teach Yourself JavaScript in 24 Hours and has also written several bestselling books about networking, certification programs, and databases. He lives with his wife in Salt Lake City, Utah.

 


Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of time., Feb 8 2010
By 
James Heil (Calgary, AB Canada) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One (Paperback)
I found this book to be very difficult. A lot of the scripts don't work they way they show them.
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Amazon.com: 2.5 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars This book confuses me greatly., Sep 17 2008
By E. G. Stephanis - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One (Paperback)
Firstly, when a book is about a constantly changing web-programming technology like AJAX, you expect it to be up-to-date, right?

Well, two chapters in, and I've already spotted several typographical errors. What's worse is the outdated nature of some of the technologies depicted in the book. Let me illustrate:

Chapter 1: When illustrating assorted web browsers the text uses IE6. I'm sorry, but IE7 has been officially released for nearly two years now, and you couldn't be bothered to upgrade the screenshots in that time? This book was published June 2008, with a 2009 copyright, and you're using screenshots that were outdated in 2006?

Further, the fact that the screenshot of Firefox in the first chapter shows that at the time of the screenshot, Firefox 1.0.7 was the current release shows that that was taken mid-2005, as Firefox 1.5 was released November 2005.

I'm sorry, but these over-two-years-old screenshots of antiquated technologies featured in a text, and the fact that it seems to feature IE6 throughout already has me somewhat turned off to the book. If this is the attention to detail that they have paid thus far, what will have slipped through the cracks in the programming portions, and what other techniques were already antiquated by the time this book was published?

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Incomplete, Sep 22 2008
By L. Carter - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One (Paperback)
As has been said in a previous review, this book already seems quite dated after only the first two chapters. Having completed the book, I can say it only got worse. Much of the basics are covered fairly well, but as the book progresses into more complicated areas, where more detailed explanations are really needed, it fails to deliver. Some of the example code will not even run without error. It seems the book is a "best of" compilation thrown together from bits of previous books, but purported to be a new work.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars I still don't understand JavaScript, Sep 11 2011
By Shayne O'Shannessy - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sams Teach Yourself Ajax, JavaScript, and PHP All in One (Paperback)
I bought this book in an attempt to teach myself Javascript and PHP. It seemed like a good idea at the time, the name implied the possibility. I found this book to be pretty average. I haven't finished it yet but I still need to write this review. I completed the entire JavaScript section of the book, as per the reading, the coding and the activities, and only learnt that I keep making a lot of mistakes in my coding (oh and I have made a clock, sort of, WOW! - Sarcasm). 130 odd pages in and all I can say is I know what Javascript is, and sort of what its capable of but that's it. This book left me confused with a headache, and I still know practically nothing about JavaScript. I can kind of read the code now, but I still have no real understanding of the code's purpose as its written. I hope the PHP section redeems this book but I won't hold my breath. After the decent HTML/CSS book by this publisher (different authors) I expected a bit better.

I realise that JavaScript is complicated (to me at least) and out of the 2 books I've read this was the better one, but I still don't know how. I found this book so unhelpful that I have ordered other books to try and salvage my attempts at JavaScripting and PHP.

Also 130 pages to learn JavaScript
40 pages to Learn PHP
And 70 Pages of "Complex Ajax Technology"

This book is way too short. My other JavaScript book, which is incredibly out of date is over 600 pages, and is only JavaScript. I will be returning to it (as complex as it is) to try and work out what I've wasted my time doing.

Turn Back! Run Away! (from this book) It's too late for me!
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