Slashdot Mirror


Creating Web Pages With Ajax

Ravi writes "Asynchronous Javascript And Xml, popularly known as Ajax, is a combination of Javascript, XML and some coding on the server side. Even though this technology existed for years, many believe it was Google which brought it to the front by implementing it on its sites and thus raising it to the cult status it enjoys now. There is something magical in seeing a website update its content without reloading the whole page, which is the visual essence of Ajax." Read the rest of Ravi's review. AJAX - Creating Web Pages with Asynchronous JavaScript and XML author Edmond Woychowsky pages 390 publisher Prentice Hall rating 9 reviewer Ravi ISBN 0-13-227267-9 summary A useful introductory book in picking up the skills in using Ajax

I found the book titled "AJAX — Creating web pages with Asynchronous JavaScript and XML" authored by Edmond Woychowsky to be a very good introductory level book on learning the basics of Ajax. Spanning 390 pages and 16 chapters, this book imparts a sound understanding of the basic features which make ajax possible.

The author starts by giving a brief introduction to the different types of web pages — static and dynamic, the tools and code used to serve them.

In the second chapter which is titled "Introducing Ajax", the author dives into the philosophy and principles of Ajax and with the aid of three simple examples explains three different ways of implementing ajax in a webpage. I found this chapter to clear some of the doubts that a newbie will have about the hype surrounding ajax.

The third chapter takes a step backwards in that it gives a birds eye view of all the XHTML elements and their associated attributes. The author also provides a table which lists the most commonly used CSS 1 elements. I found this chapter more of a ready reference than an indepth thesis on XHTML and CSS.

The fourth chapter titled "Javascript" provides a very good understanding of the language. Javascript plays an invaluable part in the greater scheme of the working of Ajax. Apart from the snippets of code and explanations, this chapter also has a number of tables listing things such as the essential JavaScript functions, characters used to create regular expressions, event handlers, Javascript operators and so on.

In the next chapter titled "Ajax Using HTML and JavaScript", the author explains how to use HTML, Javascript and stored procedures incorporated in the latest version of MySQL to create a semblance of an Ajax shopping cart. What is worth noting is that this chapter explains an old fashioned but very reliable technique which uses hidden frames and inline frames to update the data on the page. Of course the author is quick to point out that this technique is not really Ajax in the sense that it lacks the XML part.

I found the author's narration quite refreshing as he explains each concept one at a time with the aid of snippets of code, gradually building up and eventually tying all the threads together to write a true Ajax web application.

XML — eXtensible Markup Language is the successor of SGML — the language which powers HTML. XHTML on the other hand uses the XML schema. XML is a vast subject which can easily fit in a book of its own. Perhaps knowing this, and because XML plays a significant part in Ajax, the author has intelligently provided just the necessary information about XML in the sixth chapter.

The seventh chapter is a very important chapter which gives an indepth understanding of the XMLHttpRequest object which can be considered the brain behind Ajax. The author also provides some insights into the XML document object model, RSS and Web services such as SOAP.

In Chapter 8, the author gives a more indepth take on the XMLHttpRequest object and the other technologies explained in the previous chapter and illustrates by applying them in building a shopping cart application. Throughout the book, the author has highlighted the fact that ajax is a browser dependent technology and if people disable javascript in their browsers, then the whole effort will come to naught.

XPath is a technology which can be used to locate and navigate the various parts of an XML. The ninth chapter gives an introduction to the syntax used by XPath.

The next two chapters explain the concept of eXtensible Stylesheet Language for Transformations (XSLT) and how it can be used to implement Ajax. XSLT can be compared in some ways to CSS but is much more powerful and can be used to display pure XML in different styles targeting diverse media. These two chapters contain all the necessary details such as the syntatic reference and snippets of code which walks one through creating an Ajax application using XSLT.

In chapter 12, the author talks about the advantages of code reuse where creating javascript objects are explained. Surprisingly, there are two chapters on Ruby on Rails — the latest fad with the web developer community.

I found the book to be a valuable reference for upcoming Ajax web programmers. The number of tables listing the tags and their attributes itself will more than make up for the cost of the book. It has the right amount of content covering all pertinent topics without overwhelming the reader, which makes it a very good introductory book on Ajax.

Ravi Kumar is passionate about all things related to open source and free software and likes to share his thoughts and experiences related to these through his site "All about Linux".

You can purchase AJAX - Creating Web Pages with Asynchronous JavaScript and XML from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

22 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. Like frames, eh? by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 2, Insightful
    There is something magical in seeing a website update its content without reloading the whole page
    Like frames, eh? (Or Java, Flash, older Javascript apps, etc. etc. etc.)
    1. Re:Like frames, eh? by stupidfoo · · Score: 4, Funny

      it doesn't work on 64-bit browsers under *nix

      Oh noes! There goes 0.0001% of the market!

  2. json by sirdisc · · Score: 2, Informative

    Google definitely didn't invent it. At this point I think more people are using JSON for the data format versus xml. There is just way too much overhead associated with xml. There are a host of javascript and other programming langauge libraries built up to make mall this more easy. For example, the dojo toolkit for javascript has functions for sending the request and decoding the JSON for you automatically. It also provides some framework for passing parameters, handlign errors, and more. Then JSON.org has a host of built up libraries in Java, Perl, C++, Ruby, ...(many many more) for encoding the data to send back. It's all very easy to do now.

  3. Review reads like... by angelzero · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...a 4th grade book report.

    1. Re:Review reads like... by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 2, Funny

      Would get a perfect score on that new SAT essay test, though...

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  4. Last time I... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...made a webpage out of AJAX, the FBI arrested me for attempting to poison the world as a terrorist act.

  5. AJAX by nmb3000 · · Score: 5, Funny

    My biggest problem with AJAX is the popular misconceptions that surround it. For example, I was speaking to somebody a few days ago and they asked me how I would implement some survey widget as a webpage. I thought about it for a bit and told them it would be pretty easy with some PHP and MySQL. I was informed that my idea is "old and outdated". It appears this guy had already hired somebody and he is "coding it in AJAX and Dreamweaver".

    I suggested that AJAX is nice, but it's not a programming language, and more importantly it is not always the best solution for a problem. His reply? That I need to get more "2.0 centric". I was done at this point, but not before informing him that Web 2.0 is little more than pastel colors and BS.

    Surprisingly, the reason he asked me in the first place is that the guy they hired has been working on the system for the last 3 months with "little visible progress". Oh well, at least he's "2.0" enough for them.

    --
    "What do you despise? By this are you truly known." --Princess Irulan, Manual of Muad'Dib
    /)
    1. Re:AJAX by Dynedain · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To which you should have replied "PHP and MySQL are normally a part of AJAX". And you probably would have landed the job instead of getting into a semantics discussion with someone who obviously doesn't understand the technology.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    2. Re:AJAX by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 2, Funny
      To upgrade PHP and MySQL's image to the "new" Iterweb, they should revise their versioning to include the "2.0" moniker...

      PHP 2.0! MySQL 2.0 Just pass it on over to the marketing gurus...

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    3. Re:AJAX by darkchubs · · Score: 2, Funny

      yeah man , eye balls, who needs money... we can get all the money in the world. its the new new economy 2.0.4 ... get with the times, your so... release candidate 2.0. Now it you'll excuse me my star bucks mocha double late wont drink its self and my segway is double parked. TTFN

    4. Re:AJAX by celardore · · Score: 2, Funny
      The guy they hired has been working on the system for the last 3 months with "little visible progress". Oh well, at least he's "2.0" enough for them.


      Haven't you heard the rule that it can't be web 2.0 unless it is in 'beta'?
  6. About 60% of visitors have javascript enabled by KalvinB · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.freeringtoneheaven.com/ has tracked over 70,000 ips and about 64% have javascript enabled. At http://www.icarusindie.com/ with 78,000 ips tracked only about 38% have javascript enabled.

    The only reason FRH is higher is because visitors were required to have javascript enabled in order to download ringtones. That restriction has been removed. Icarus Indie has never required javascript to be enabled. It just keeps statistics. The sites keep track by using javascript to switch an image from a jpg to a php script. Those without js just see the jpg and those with see the image returned by the php script which also updates the database to indicate the ip has js enabled.

    AJAX may be cool but if you use it you better have a good reason to convince people to turn javascript on or you're just going to lose visitors.

    There were all kinds of Javascript security issues not too long ago and people still don't trust it.

  7. Re:He should get Paula to do this... by Osty · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wrong forum, dude. Besides, Paula's more enterprisey than ajaxy.

  8. Re:Ajax is... by jo42 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Could you run that management/marketing speak through a To Plain English filter and repost. I didn't understand a word you pecked out on yer keyboard and then posted...

  9. XSLT by gaspar+ilom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I find it interesting that the review mentions XSLT, which, IMHO, is very powerful:

    You can completely separate most display logic from the "data" and business logic. (...which can be handled before the XSL transformation, and done such that you get XML nodes to feed into your transformations.)

    It may seem complicated at first, but there are so many advantages:

          1.) you get the layout of the site defined in a declarative manner, basically as as data. (and that XSL "code" can be easily analyzed or transformed, itself.)

          2.) you can disentangle a lot of markup from your PHP/ASP[VBS/JScript]/Python code.

          3.) The output of your XSLT transformation can be fed into other transformations.

          4.) Your XSLT is highly portable across platforms, even between server vs. client-side rendering.
    (Although, it bums me out that Microsoft has decided to not support XSL 2.0.)

          5.) Manipulating an X/HTML dom via a browser's built-in XSLT processor is much faster than using JavaScript only. (E.g.: using JavaScript-only to traverse a DOM in order to select, merge, append, and move nodes...)

    I'd be curious to know what this book has to say on the matter.

  10. Try the XForms standards-compliant AJAX by leighklotz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Try AJAX with markup only, no hand-written JavaScript, by using the W3C's XForms standard. There are a number of implementations such as the Servlet-based Chiba (which fronts for Dojo and other packages), FormFaces written entirely in JavaScript (no server-side component), entire server-side pipeline systems such as Orbeon, and full client implementations such as the Mozilla/Firefox XForms Extension (just type "xforms" into your Firefox extensions finder), FormsPlayer IE Plugin, or cell-phone capable implementations such as PicoForms and SolidForms.

    I wrote an entire webmail reader using PHP for the back end and XForms for the client. It runs in the Mozilla XForms implementation but could easily be made to work in any of the above, which differ mostly in how the CSS works. xmlmail

    And for completness, I was an editor of an earlier version of the W3C XForms recommendation.

  11. AJAX was a Microsoft invention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, it is a Microsoft invention. No kidding. The Outlook Web Access (OWA) team are the ones that lobbied the Internet Explorer team to include the (original) XMLHTTP object; which was originally MADE by the OWA team.

    It's fair to say that OWA for Exchange 2000 was the _first_ AJAX application. They started development of it all in 1998.

  12. Google? by CDPatten · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "think" is the important word when suggesting Google had something to do with AJAX. They have had NOTHING to do with it's creation seeing how that is up to the makers of web browsers. Microsoft really invented the functionality while most of the slashdotters were still getting wedgies in school.

    The term AJAX may have been coined a couple of years ago in an article, but MS deserves the credit. Its also worth noting they were using it on microsoft.com before most of us had even heard the word google.

    Lets see how many of you can swallow that and actually give them their do.

  13. Re:Ajax is... by ClosedSource · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "What's truly significant is the ability to make web requests and processing in the background."

    This is really just a hack to get around the fact that web standards weren't designed for anything beyond static pages. A better solution would be to rework these standards so that any user interaction with an HTML element could optionally trigger a request. For most web apps this would make Javascript unnecessary.

  14. Re:Like regular applications, eh? by myz24 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yea! Lets create a way for people to extend the functionality of IE...lets call it ActiveX! BRILLIANT!

  15. Re:Like regular applications, eh? by Sancho · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It depends completely on what you're trying to accomplish.

    The AJAX model shines for web applications. You know, applications where you need to make frequent requests to the server. Flash can do this, but as others have said, you get the same latency issues with Flash making queries to the server as with an AJAX-like application.

    AJAX seems like a terrible idea for standalone applications, which is what you said in an earlier post. So far, I haven't seen a single AJAX application that didn't query a server somewhere. The reason for this is precisely because we have better options: Java/Flash if you want to stay in the browser, standalone applications if you don't.

    Maybe we've all just misunderstood you. Gmail is arguably the best-known AJAX application. Its primary user-interface is web-based. If you're suggesting that web-based e-mail is a ridiculous concept because you could just download a standalone client, download your messages, and read them off-line, I can see that as a valid viewpoint. But the reason that web applications exist (in general) is because nearly everyone has access to a web browser. You don't have to download a new program for each website you want to use. Imagine taking this idea to the extreme and having to download Google Internet Search rathern than just pointing your browser to http://www.google.com/. Wouldn't that seem a little weird (I'm old enough to have used Archie and Gopher, so no jokes about the young ones, please)

    Web browsers are good middleware because they're ubiquitous. Everyone who has an Internet connection has one. Using the functionality of the browser (much like the Java sandbox, incidentally, which you said was valid in http://books.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=200963&c id=16458167) rather than writing a complete application has a number of advantages, not the least of which is version control (being able to ensure that people are using the latest version of your software, no version mismatches, etc).

    I think AJAX is an interesting model, and I'll be following its adoption with interest. I don't think it's the end-all be-all of computing, but I don't think it's completely without merit, either. Then again, I don't have anything against traditional web applications, for the most part, so that may be where our viewpoints differ.

  16. Re:390 pages and 16 chapters? by Spliffster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    nice example.

    in theory this might work, ever tried to use "try() {...} catch() {...}" in IE6 ? good luck. the xmlhttprequest interfaces are not 100% the same on all browsers (which support it), one still has to write crossbrowser code, i could go on for days (there are many nice "ajax" libraries which deal with these issues).

    I haven't read the book ,however i was always happy with the oreilly books on javscript, because these books pointet out most of the browser differences/annoyances to keep in mind while designing.

    Cheers,
    -S