Microsoft® ASP.NET and AJAX: Architecting Web Applications (Developer Reference) Rethink the way you plan, design, and build Web applications—with expert guidance from Web development luminary Dino Esposito. Whether giving legacy sites a much-needed tune-up—or architecting rich Internet applications from the
| TITLE | : | Microsoft® ASP.NET and AJAX: Architecting Web Applications (Developer Reference) |
| AUTHOR | : | |
| RATING | : | 4.92 (684 Votes) |
| ASIN | : | 0735626219 |
| FORMAT TYPE | : | Paperback |
| NUMBER of PAGES | : | 352 Pages |
| PUBLISH DATE | : | 2009-04-15 |
| GENRE | : |
Rethink the way you plan, design, and build Web applications—with expert guidance from Web development luminary Dino Esposito. Whether giving legacy sites a much-needed tune-up—or architecting rich Internet applications from the ground up—you’ll learn pragmatic approaches to AJAX development that you can employ today.Discover how to:
- Delve into the mechanics and design goals of partial rendering—such as improving page-refresh speed
- Use AJAX-enabled server controls to bring desktop-like functionality to Web solutions
- Apply design patterns to common Web development issues, including client-side data binding
- Manipulate JavaScript more easily using the jQuery and Microsoft AJAX libraries
- Examine the interoperability and security models in Microsoft Silverlight
- Weigh the tradeoffs when architecting Web applications f
EDITORIAL :
About the AuthorDino Esposito is a well-known ASP.NET, AJAX, and Microsoft Silverlight® expert who has written or co-written several popular books, including Microsoft ASP.NET and Ajax: Architecting Web Applications and Programming Microsoft ASP.NET 4. He is a regular contributor to MSDN® Magazine and speaks at industry events such as DevConnections and Microsoft TechEd.
REVIEW :
and C.' but it doesn't show A and C it's hard to know what the answer would be if (as they often do) the examiners shuffle the order of the answer choices.
Overall, a great value.. One of the best collections outside China is in New York's Metropolitan Museum of art, the subject of this superb volume. Like all mysteries, I thought I would be able to figure out the mystery. Ted Stearn's Fuzz and Pluck details the struggles for survival of his title characters, a talking teddy bear and a skinny, plucked chicken, respectively. This is an example of Nora Roberts at her best. The writing is good but the print is so tiny I require a magnifier to read it. The references to Hannibal, Missouri, just up the road, & Mark Twain's Mississippi, practically in the backyard, underline just how quirky these people are. Example: Lucky Charms, white bread and white pasta, totino pizza rolls, candy cor


No comments:
Post a Comment