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Bezig met laden... DOM Enlightenmentdoor Cody Lindley
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With DOM Enlightenment , you ?ll learn how to manipulate HTML more efficiently by scripting the Document Object Model (DOM) without a DOM library. Using code examples in cookbook style, author Cody Lindley ( jQuery Cookbook ) walks you through modern DOM concepts to demonstrate how various node objects work. Over the past decade, developers have buried the DOM under frameworks that simplify its use. This book brings these tools back into focus, using concepts and code native to modern browsers. If you have JavaScript experience, you ?ll understand the role jQuery plays in DOM scripting, and learn how to use the DOM directly in applications for mobile devices and specific browsers that require low overhead. Understand JavaScript node objects and their relationship to the DOM Learn the properties and methods of document, element, text, and DocumentFragment objects Delve into element node selecting, geometry, and inline styles Add CSS style sheets to an HTML document and use CSSStyleRule objects Set up DOM events by using different code patterns Learn the author ?s vision for dom.js, a jQuery-inspired DOM Library for modern browsers Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)006.7Information Computer Science; Knowledge and Systems Special Topics Multimedia systemsLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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The text is written clearly and the examples can well be understood. The selection of material constitutes a balanced view of the significant elements/methods of the DOM.
The problem with the book in my opinion is the somewhat heuristic approach. For example a repeated quote is "To get accurate information ... it's best to ignore the specification and to ask the browser what is available" (e.g., p.84, p.104, p.106).
In my opinion, the irregularities of the different browser implementations are not sufficiently accounted for. Resig's "Secrets of the Javascript Ninja" does a better job at this. The claim in the foreword (that this text does for the DOM what Crockford's "The good parts" did for Javascript) is not maintainable. ( )