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Learning jQuery, Third Edition

You're reading from   Learning jQuery, Third Edition Create better interaction, design, and web development with simple JavaScript techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849516549
Length 428 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Learning jQuery Third Edition
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started FREE CHAPTER 2. Selecting Elements 3. Handling Events 4. Styling and Animating 5. Manipulating the DOM 6. Sending Data with Ajax 7. Using Plugins 8. Developing Plugins 9. Advanced Selectors and Traversing 10. Advanced Events 11. Advanced Effects 12. Advanced DOM Manipulation 13. Advanced Ajax JavaScript Closures Testing JavaScript with QUnit Quick Reference Index

Chapter 6. Sending Data with Ajax

The term Ajax was coined by Jesse James Garrett in 2005 as an acronym standing for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML. Since then it has come to represent many different things, as the term encompasses a group of related capabilities and techniques. At its most basic level, an Ajax solution includes the following technologies:

  • JavaScript, to capture interactions with the user or other browser-related events

  • The XMLHttpRequest object, which allows requests to be made to the server without interrupting other browser tasks

  • A file on the server, presenting text in a data format such as XML, HTML, or JSON

  • More JavaScript, to interpret the data from the server and present it on the page

Ajax has been hailed as the savior of the web landscape, transforming static web pages into interactive web applications. Many frameworks have sprung up to assist developers in taming it, because of the inconsistencies in the browsers' implementations of the XMLHttpRequest object; jQuery...

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