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ASP.NET jQuery Cookbook (Second Edition)

You're reading from   ASP.NET jQuery Cookbook (Second Edition) Over 60 recipes for writing client script in ASP.NET 4.6 applications using jQuery

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782173113
Length 478 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Sonal Merchant Sonal Merchant
Author Profile Icon Sonal Merchant
Sonal Merchant
Sonal Aneel Allana Sonal Aneel Allana
Author Profile Icon Sonal Aneel Allana
Sonal Aneel Allana
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with jQuery in ASP.NET FREE CHAPTER 2. Using jQuery Selectors with ASP.NET Controls 3. Event Handling Using jQuery 4. DOM Traversal and Manipulation in ASP.NET 5. Visual Effects in ASP.NET Sites 6. Working with Graphics in ASP.NET Sites 7. Ajax Using jQuery 8. Creating and Using jQuery Plugins Index

Introduction

The Document Object Model (DOM) provides a representation for web pages as structured documents with a tree-like format. Each node in the tree is tied to properties, methods, and event handlers. The web page is itself referred to as the document object and can be accessed from the window object using window.document. The HTML elements on the page become element nodes such as a head element or body element. These nodes, in turn, can have children nodes such as table, div, input, and so on. Some nodes may be text nodes while some may also be comment nodes.

It is important to note that the DOM is not a programming language but rather an object-oriented model that can be used across various languages, such as JavaScript, HTML, and XML. Thus, it is language-independent and provides a common Application Programming Interface (API) that can be implemented by various languages. By connecting web pages to programming languages, you can manipulate their style, structure, and content...

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