Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology
Simon P. Chappell writes "Is there anyone left in our industry that hasn't heard of Ajax, the ultimate client-side technology for web developers? Like many, I've read several books on it and now I'm even brushing up on JavaScript so that I can try it out. There is, however, an aspect of Ajax that often seems to get lost in the rush to play with the new browser tricks; Ajax enhanced web applications still need to work closely with server-side components. To even up the balance of books that concentrate on the browser end of Ajax, Apress brings us Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology by Frank W. Zammetti.
Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology
author
Frank W. Zammetti
pages
504 (16 page index)
publisher
Apress
rating
9 out of 10
reviewer
Simon P. Chappell
ISBN
1590596951
summary
A useful and practical book for those wishing to write web applications that combine Ajax front-ends with Java technology on the server-side.
This is a book for anyone developing web applications with Java server-side components. It does assume a minimum level of Java ability, but not that you should know any specific frameworks. If you know basic Servlet and JavaServer Page programming, then you'll be fine for working your way through the frameworks presented in the book.
The book is divided into two parts. The first part is just three chapters and covers the principles of programming using Ajax and Java. Chapter one is the "hurrah for Ajax", obligatory examples and brainwashing. A discussion of the "classic web" and its problems leads into examples of the new web and Ajax enhanced websites. Chapter two is an introduction to the technologies behind Ajax for those who may be less familiar with JavaScript, the DOM, XML and parsing XML using JavaScript and Cascading Style Sheets (more usually known by its acronym CSS). Don't expect to learn these technologies from scratch out of this chapter, but if you have some amount of exposure to them, it will remind you of all the bits that you'll need for Ajax. Chapter three then does a similar thing for the server-side Java technologies. Again, if you snoozed through Java classes at school, don't expect this to get you caught up, but it will refresh your memory on the useful pieces.
The second part of the book holds the seven example projects. These are the meat of the book, given that the title promises practical projects and I think that the book pretty much delivers on its promise All seven projects are interesting; six are practical and the last one is just good old fashioned fun. The projects build in terms of size, so the first one is the simplest and the game, coming last is the most complex. The first project is a type-ahead suggestion engine, modeled after Google's Suggest. Next we have an Ajax-based webmail client. Chapter six builds a RSS newsfeed reader (because, as the book says, every Ajax book has to have one). Chapter seven is a photo sharing application, which, while it may not compete with Flickr, is quite usable for its size. Chapter eight is an organizer. Umm, needless to say you'll either love this or ignore it. (What can I say? If I was organized enough to use an organizer, I'd be organized enough not to need it!) Chapter nine brings yet another chat program to the world.
Last, but as the phrase goes, not least, chapter ten is the grand finale of the example projects. As befits the author's fine sense of humor, the final project is a game; Ajax Warrior! This application has graphics designed by a professional graphic artist and looks far above any other example application that I've ever seen.
As soon as I saw that Mr. Zammetti had written a book, I rushed to be the first to volunteer to review it. This will need no explanation to members of the Struts mailing list, but for the rest of you it might help if I explain that he is that wonderful combination of a funny and helpful guy. I knew that anything he wrote was going to be first rate technically and was also going to be written in a light and relaxed style; always a winner in this kind of book.
I liked the fact that Mr. Zammetti covers a number of approaches to writing both the client and server-sides of the applications. For the server-side of a number of the applications, he uses plain JavaServer Pages, yet for others he uses industry-leading frameworks including WebWork and Struts. On the client-side he continues to mix it up, with some applications using "naked" Ajax, others using DWR, AjaxTags from Java Web Parts, DWR, Dojo, JSON and Prototype.
One more thing to like about the book is that the applications actually look very nice and quite professional. Perhaps the folks at 37signals shouldn't be nervous, but Mr. Zammetti has certainly raised the bar for the appearance of example applications for books.
The flip side of the use of multiple frameworks and Ajax libraries is that all of the breadth means reduced depth. Each of the frameworks and libraries is introduced and demonstrated, but then just as it begins to get interesting, it's off to the next one. If you're looking for more depth in each introduced item, then this book may not be for you.
In conclusion, this is a useful and practical book for those wishing to write web applications that combine Ajax front-ends with Java technology on the server-side. Strongly recommended.
You can purchase Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
This is a book for anyone developing web applications with Java server-side components. It does assume a minimum level of Java ability, but not that you should know any specific frameworks. If you know basic Servlet and JavaServer Page programming, then you'll be fine for working your way through the frameworks presented in the book.
The book is divided into two parts. The first part is just three chapters and covers the principles of programming using Ajax and Java. Chapter one is the "hurrah for Ajax", obligatory examples and brainwashing. A discussion of the "classic web" and its problems leads into examples of the new web and Ajax enhanced websites. Chapter two is an introduction to the technologies behind Ajax for those who may be less familiar with JavaScript, the DOM, XML and parsing XML using JavaScript and Cascading Style Sheets (more usually known by its acronym CSS). Don't expect to learn these technologies from scratch out of this chapter, but if you have some amount of exposure to them, it will remind you of all the bits that you'll need for Ajax. Chapter three then does a similar thing for the server-side Java technologies. Again, if you snoozed through Java classes at school, don't expect this to get you caught up, but it will refresh your memory on the useful pieces.
The second part of the book holds the seven example projects. These are the meat of the book, given that the title promises practical projects and I think that the book pretty much delivers on its promise All seven projects are interesting; six are practical and the last one is just good old fashioned fun. The projects build in terms of size, so the first one is the simplest and the game, coming last is the most complex. The first project is a type-ahead suggestion engine, modeled after Google's Suggest. Next we have an Ajax-based webmail client. Chapter six builds a RSS newsfeed reader (because, as the book says, every Ajax book has to have one). Chapter seven is a photo sharing application, which, while it may not compete with Flickr, is quite usable for its size. Chapter eight is an organizer. Umm, needless to say you'll either love this or ignore it. (What can I say? If I was organized enough to use an organizer, I'd be organized enough not to need it!) Chapter nine brings yet another chat program to the world.
Last, but as the phrase goes, not least, chapter ten is the grand finale of the example projects. As befits the author's fine sense of humor, the final project is a game; Ajax Warrior! This application has graphics designed by a professional graphic artist and looks far above any other example application that I've ever seen.
As soon as I saw that Mr. Zammetti had written a book, I rushed to be the first to volunteer to review it. This will need no explanation to members of the Struts mailing list, but for the rest of you it might help if I explain that he is that wonderful combination of a funny and helpful guy. I knew that anything he wrote was going to be first rate technically and was also going to be written in a light and relaxed style; always a winner in this kind of book.
I liked the fact that Mr. Zammetti covers a number of approaches to writing both the client and server-sides of the applications. For the server-side of a number of the applications, he uses plain JavaServer Pages, yet for others he uses industry-leading frameworks including WebWork and Struts. On the client-side he continues to mix it up, with some applications using "naked" Ajax, others using DWR, AjaxTags from Java Web Parts, DWR, Dojo, JSON and Prototype.
One more thing to like about the book is that the applications actually look very nice and quite professional. Perhaps the folks at 37signals shouldn't be nervous, but Mr. Zammetti has certainly raised the bar for the appearance of example applications for books.
The flip side of the use of multiple frameworks and Ajax libraries is that all of the breadth means reduced depth. Each of the frameworks and libraries is introduced and demonstrated, but then just as it begins to get interesting, it's off to the next one. If you're looking for more depth in each introduced item, then this book may not be for you.
In conclusion, this is a useful and practical book for those wishing to write web applications that combine Ajax front-ends with Java technology on the server-side. Strongly recommended.
You can purchase Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
If you plan to use lots of Ajax, it's probably better to build your own framework rather than using 3 different ones so that you have all the functionality you need. There really isn't all that much to AJAX, and it's not to hard to build your own framework to support all the features you need.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Er, I like some of the results that people have made from AJAX, but to call it anything like the "ultimate client-side technology" is utterly bizarre and casts extreme doubt on the reviewer's credentials to review anything computer-related. I think it's safe to say that everyone that has studied AJAX has one overwhelming common opinion:
"For the LOVE OF GOD! Why the hell in the year 2006 do we need to write anything in this godawful buggy language? There HAS to be a better solution. THERE HAS TO BE! STFU, there HAS to be! Please, GOD, there must be!! [breaks down in tears]"
If AJAX is the "ultimate", then we might as well all take the poison kool-aid, because human civilization is an abject failure.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
hehe... that happened to me this morning. Did you know that javascript will go ahead and add a closing select tag for you when you use e.g. targetdiv.innerHTML += 'select name=whatev'
At least I think that's what was happening. Instead I did
str += 'select name=whatev'
then put all the options in, then did
innerHTML = str;
(If anyone can show me what I was doing wrong -- other than writing an AJAX app -- I'd appreciate it)
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
I mean, it and its crew sure as hell couldn't stop Flash Gordon, and it did for the Emperor Ming. I for one don't want to be writing code only to be be speared by some giant spaceship coming through my back wall.
How come popular frameworks like GWT and Echo is left out without mentioning in this book. GWT is writing code in Java and integrating with Java server side (servlet) technologies and similarly echo with a little bit different approach. -Rafiq http://www.ajaxtoday.com/
One of the most often overlooked issues with AJAX is the huge bandwidth that most AJAX implementations consume. Everyone is out rushing to build AJAX apps into even the simplest applications, and the result is slow loading time and greatly increased server loads. These enhancements often don't enhance the user experience any more than adding an extra cupholder or pinstripe add to the functionality of a car.
Many small to medium sized companies host on shared servers and think "Oh, I have 1TB of transfer, so I can build really cool AJAX apps and watch the customers flock to my site", and then wonder why their site can't handle more than a few concurrent users. The developers implementing AJAX apps need to consider the server-side infrastructure, and often ignore this (or are forced to ignore this by their managers) simply to have "pretty sites".
The site that I help work on found this out the hard way. We tried using a simple AJAX enabled 'send to a friend' form. It looked GREAT, but kept causing our server to hit its allotted CPU max. Since we removed this feature, we've had a 10-fold increase in traffic (not as a result), but have never come close to reaching the CPU max. Sure, it could have been a poorly written AJAX app, but I think it's almost undeniable that a static html + php site is far better suited for performance when a company has limited bandwidth/CPU.
Crack - Free with every butt and set of boobs
Who reads several books on a technology before they "try it out"?
Hah! Ultimate? Hardly.
AJAX is a hack to add more "dynamicallness" to web sites. HTML currently relies on HTTP and HTTP suffer a fatal flaw: it is client-initiated. Put another way: it's a poll technology. There is no way to allow the server to initiate a connection to a client.
As sites integrate more and more AJAX you tend to notice that what they are ultimately striving for is a standard desktop application. But it won't work as is and so AJAX is just a mere band aid. Ever try to use Google calender or gmail with a slow/latencied connection or when their servers are busy? I've had to wait over 30 seconds for an event to display in their calendar without any GUI notification that it's working. This can be mitigated but my point that such failures as a GUI are prevalent in AJAX applications because they're trying to be something they can't -- a desktop app.
I don't care how nifty AJAX makes web sites but don't call it "ultimate". Please.
No, the "ultimate" technology will not include HTML, HTTP, or JavaScript in their current incarnations as all have fatal flaws that just can't measure up to a standard desktop app in terms of functionality. This would be fine if the goal was different but it's not and it's precisely why (all things being a equal as possible) I will never bet on an online office suite trumping a true desktop app.
Nevermind that what web apps are heralded for -- cross-platformness -- requires a lot of effort to make happen. IE, FF, opera, and safari just don't act the same way in terms of rendering and JS functionality. There are so many things working against this AJAX movement that I'm amazed that it works (mostly).
:wq
http://www.nextapp.com/Echo2is awesome. Use it. love it. K. Bye.
I must say, this is quote a combination of technologies that have caused me nothing but trouble!
I know Java has a lot of fans, but I've found it to be nothing but trouble. It's clear why it failed on the client side: poor UI responsiveness, excessive memory usage, and a lack of decent integration with the host desktop. The only reason it succeeded on the server was because Sun and IBM both managed to hype it so much.
At work, I have to deal with Java EE on a daily basis, but my college background included much Common Lisp. Every day I encounter situations where Common Lisp could have been used for a much more concise, performant and reliable solution than the Java-based implementation we're actually using.
JavaScript is a very neat language. I've seen people do some remarkable things with it. But AJAX is not one of them. Every AJAX site and service I have used, including those offered by Google and Yahoo!, have made me yearn for either a standalone desktop application, or a simple CGI webapp.
Neither Java nor AJAX manages to strike a good balance in any of the areas where they are used. Both suffer from some rather serious performance issues, for instance. Java consumes a great number of clockcycles, and relatively large amounts of memory (even with the shared classfile support of JRE 1.5). AJAX often manages to waste excessive amounts of bandwidth. Between the two, I see my system performance suffering greatly.
The more I see certain groups pushing AJAX and Java, the more I'm inclined to my Common Lisp roots. Common Lisp is about simplicity, but not at the expense of power. That's the sort of thing we need when developing massive web applications.
"Its actually a very good technology and you don't have to re-write everything and unlike what most people think, you don't need RPC or to write Javascript. And of course, it all depends on how you use it. Good engineering practice always wins in the end."
Are you sure? Because Slashdot always tells me to hate anything buzzwordy and AJAX is it. So now I'm totally torn. Believe slashdot? Or not believe slashdot. I think I'll go lie down. I have a headache.
There is no way to allow the server to initiate a connection to a client.
I guess that's why we call it a client and a server, isn't it? This has nothing to do with HTTP but is inherent to the client-server model (which is actually a pretty good model). If it is a 'persistent' connection you are looking for you're in luck, plenty of protocols support that. Sure if you use inferior technologies such as JavaScript/AJAX you can't use those, but there are very reasonable alternatives. (Whatever happened to that good old cross-browser, cross-platform, high performance, much more widely supported than is often assumed, javascript interoperable web technology called Java Applets?)
Save yourself $17.00 (!) by buying the book here: Practical Ajax Projects with Java Technology. And if you use the "secret" A9.com discount, you can save an extra 1.57%!
Mainframes worked the same way, and that didn't stop them any. In fact, it would be stupid to have a server trying to contact a bunch of firewalled client boxes out on the Internet. Besides not being scalable, the pull design of the web ensures that the clients are protected against exactly that sort of communication.
I think the issue you're concerned about is that there's no way to maintain an open channel. i.e. IRC maintains an open connection. Telnet maintains an open connection. FTP maintains an open connection. Pretty much everything except AJAX can maintain a connection rather than having to poll for the latest content at regular intervals.
I agree that such a design can be annoying, but it's something of a requirement for the web to function properly. Right now, you've got a few ways around this:
1. Use Mozilla APIs in a signed web application to obtain a low-level TCP/IP connection.
2. Find a Draft Web Application standards compliant browser, and use that so you can open a TCP/IP connection. (Good luck on that.)
3. Use the Livescript interface between Java and JavaScript to maintain a TCP/IP connection over a hidden applet.
4. Use an IFrame pointing to a servlet that keeps the connection open. Every time the server wants to tell you something, it "pushes" (i.e. writes and flushes) a few JavaScript commands down that pipeline. Those commands get executed immediately, thus providing a remote event system. The JavaScript code monitors the connection and automatically reconnects if the connection is lost. (This is what most web<->IRC portals do.)
5. Redesign your application. You're probably trying to do something that's a bad idea in the first place.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Does anybody else get the same feeling when working with the web? We have had incredible advances in technology yet we keep using HTML and JavaScript as our base for no other reason than tradition and because that is what people expect.
While it is something of a hack on top of a hack on top of a hack, it is possible to do server initiated communication and build a clean framework around doing so. If an app is written such that the client initiates a request to the server which will result in a multipart response, the server can then use the established connection to deliver new data to the client at any time. If each part of the multipart message can actually be interpreted by the client as a complete response, it becomes possible to do all kinds of nifty 'push' related things. Do a search on COMET (blame Alex Russell, of dojo fame, for the name) for a discussion this and similar methodologies. What I hate is that both Ajax and Comet are concepts that are built on top of a less than perfectly sufficient underlying api (javascript) so you spend most of your engineering time working around issues with the platform rather than implementing application functionality. And we are about to undergo a change to an entirely new generation of web browsers (ie 7, ff 2) which do nothing to try to resolve this problem.
--sam
Stop it with these nonsense books and just pick up GWT. Understand that putting it all on the client side is more powerful and in practice generally more reliable and just as fast as server side tool kits, if not more so.
I believe this is the real benefit of AJAX methods that go beyond the asynchronous client/server communication.
Now you write Java programs that are compiled into complete Javascript programs that work on IE, FF, Safari and Opera with generated DHTML, etc. You use whatever you want back on the server side. The Javascript generated for you will probably be as good as anything you can write in JS and most likely more complex and better tested.
This is such a better parigdim than having the server create these user forms and controls using minimal Javascript and then posting back for more forms. Or simply sending all the forms over in a bloated DHTML mess. Now we have actual programs on the client side that behave like Websites and rich clients.
Make a site in GWT and see how easy and fun it is. It's a whole different world of Website and very clearly the future. Maybe not GWT, but having a Javascript program as the Website and the server agnostic. I would assume we will see better Javascript caching and a client/server versioning system to make sure users have the latest version of a site making for insanely fast Websites that are downloaded once with only calls for content and no longer infrastructure.
"If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer
Most of the anti-Ajax FUD comes from people who've never really tried to use it - people for whom the light bulb hasn't turned on yet. First of all, it's really not as hard to make things work on multiple platforms as the naysayers claim. I have complicated AJAX interfaces that work just fine in IE, Firefox, and Safari. It's the same basic cross browser testing we've had to deal with for years. You just have to take the time to actually do proper testing and after a you gain some experience you learn which techniques work on all browsers and which ones don't - so you write a function to abstract the browser quirks into their own black box. All in all, the more you do it, the more productive you get.
I'd say that AJAX is probably a risky move for public facing apps unless it's just to dress things up, but for intranet/business apps it is very real right now.
I'll grant you that throwing around words like Ultimate might be a bit much, but it is possible to make web apps behave more like desktop apps than ever before. I don't see Ajax replacing Word, but I do see it replacing Peoplesoft and SAP.
You can make a difference. Donate to The LEEBY (Larry Ellison's Even Bigger Yacht) Fund.
so i get from this complaint....the problem with Ajax is the A......as in asynchronus?.......derrr...yes try having an open connection to 1000+ web users....see how that goes
There is no way to allow the server to initiate a connection to a client.
Wrong. Read up on Comet request processing. For Jetty, for Tomcat, and for Glassfish.
Yes, me. The only AJAX I've heard of is the DHTML rebranding that presumes scripting is enabled and breaks the back button. AJAX is something for idiots to inflict on themselves.
This is how I view technologies that allow you to program in a language and compile it to DHTML and Javascript. Essentially the same idea as an Applet. I think we now have the power on the client side for the bandwidth and the execution.
"If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer
On the topic of Java and Ajax you should check out icefaces, its a great Ajax framework and its completely free, and does not require any javascript programming.
Check out their Component Showcase.
Yeah, because the fact that a server cannot initiate a request matters soooooooo much in a lot of more advanced architecture, like SOA. Obviously AJAX isn't for everything, but for a lot of things, it does peachy.
Also, your problem with waiting on Google's app without notification would be there in a normal desktop app too: AKA: the issue is simply that the GUI didn't put the proper feedbacks. Nothing in the typical implementations of AJAX prevents the developer from adding such notifications ---> if google forgot it, its google's fault, not the technology's.
The problem with AJAX is the "J". JavaScript can be disabled by the user and your site will stop working unless you have fallbacks. Often the user is not the one who has disabled javascript in their browser, rather their admin has.
If you want a page to work reliably 100% of the time, you simply cannot use AJAX/Javascript. It is a toy, nothing more.
If I cannot achieve what I want with standard html output from a web server then I'll write a client application and distribute it to the target users, this way you have a real application that can be trusted to work and is far more functional.
The Java BluePrints web site has guidelines on using Ajax and Java: http://java.sun.com/blueprints/ajax.html It presents guidelines on using Ajax with the Java EE 5 and J2EE 1.4 SDK. The Java EE 5 sample code has been tested with Sun's open source application server (http://glassfish.dev.java.net/) -Larry Freeman Manager, Java BluePrints Sun Microsystems
In a nutshell: AJAX work pays my bills; it still is a band aid; far from "ultimate" worthy; I never said cross-platform (misnomver)/cross-browser was impossible (you still have to put up with all the crap that comes with...the *whole* architecture of HTML + CSS + JS not being implemented the same). Not intending to toot my own horn, but I've done things with AJAX that I haven't seen anywhere on the net.
So, in short: don't pigeon hole me with the clueless people. Do you even know what FUD means? Lambasting a claim of ultimacy on a band aid of a solution is not instilling fear nor uncertainty nor doubt. Wait: gross assumptions made on the internet about someone else? Never!
Google has spreadsheets and word processing. It has been attempted, is being attempted, and will continue to be attempted. I'm saying I'll never bet on them winning with the current incarnations because they are grossly inadequate for the task.
:wq
You're a little touchy, Tiger. I don't think you're clueless. Far from it. From your sig you've obviously heard of VI and for that I owe you my eternal allegiance and will invite you to take an honored position in my WoW guild.
I just think you're being a little pedantic about all this. Ajax is good stuff and it's going to get better. What should we be using? Flex? Applets? ActiveX controls God forbid?
Let's keep a positive attitude and we'll defeat the terrorists one absolute positioned div tag at a time.
You can make a difference. Donate to The LEEBY (Larry Ellison's Even Bigger Yacht) Fund.
Anyone else sick and tired of all this Ajax hype? I wonder how much damage is all this hype causing. Just a while ago my boss asked me to implement a simple one single text field and button form with Ajax because he wanted to make sure the submission was "responsive". After trying to persuade him otherwise and failing, it is needless to say, a simple project became a mess very quickly with very little benefit for the end user. Ajax has its place and usage, I think that's what these books should be focusing on rather than selling it as holy water.
[alk]
"Coding Horror!!!" to draw a phrase from McConnell and the bible, Code Complete...
IMHO, AJAX and dynamic Javascript-based HTML injection really have very few use-cases where they should be used. Take for example Google Maps. If you want a dynamic application (from a browser) that graphically interacts with the user in a virtually real-time fashion, you are going to have to resort to AJAX and HTML injection.
But why in the hell would you use AJAX for a plain-old form-submission and a response page? Or for reporting? Or in an application like Cognos ReportStudio (talk about coding horror). Another example of this horrible misuse is Microsoft's AdCenter. Why in the hell would they resort to AJAX reporting versus just a plain old "submit the form and get the response". It just doesn't make sense.
Not only that, but does anyone else have a nightmare with trying to debug dynamic HTML injected apps? I mean you don't really know if the problem occurred prior to the submit, on the server side, or on the client side after the response was received. And you will have to use both a regular debugger and a Javascript debugger to find out.
AJAX belongs in the pile of overused/misused technologies in software engineering...
Anybody got anymore to throw on that pile?
I recently released my version of web-based Risk, called Grand Strategy. It is an Ajax application written using DWR (Direct Web Remoting) and the Dojo Toolkit.
It is by far the most sophisticated Ajax base game I have seen. I'd be interested in comparing it so other Ajax based games.
Has anyone seen or developed an Ajax based game I could take a look at?
Grand Strategy
Interesting comment. I hosted a meeting here last week and someone mentioned Ajax. Several people hadn't heard of it. Main contenders were either a domestic cleaner or a Trojan war hero.
"The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes" - Winston Churchill
After many months of using various AJAX libraries, I watched the Scott Guthrie Introduction to Atlas video. (You can get to it from http://www.asp.net/learn/videos/default.aspx?tabid =63#atlas, and was astounded at how much easier it makes it.
No more having to come up with all kinds of weird JavaScript to do the simplest things. Throw a few normal controls inside of an UpdatePanel, set your triggers, and you've suddenly got a much more responsive web app.
The whole ScriptManager makes it insanely faster to create AJAX apps, no mucking with JavaScript at all. And the JavaScript emitted by the script manager automatically adapts to the browser you are on, FireFox or IE. Surprisingly, being a Microsoft product, some of it actually works better on FireFox. That was a big surprise.
Now I'm just waiting for the actual release. Don't want to get too far into a project with the CTP version, cause you know _something_ will change between the CTP and the actual release.
I'll probably get fried for saying it here, but Microsoft has done a very good thing here.
I know there are a million ways to go, but I've had really good luck doing ajaxy things with the prototype library and custom taglibs. If your interface is off the beaten path, jsps w/ custom tags give you a ton of control and are great for div loading - meaning they help you keep things on the server side as much as possible, which is always a good thing when dealing with javascript.
Doug
"Is there anyone left in our industry that hasn't heard of Ajax, the ULTIMATE client-side technology for web developers?"
And pray tell me, when and WHO have bestowed the ultimateness over ajax ? Its just another mesh-up of old existing stuff, all of which were not ultimate "technologies" when they came up, and all of which have not became "ultimate" any time after, just as ajax. Just another "new" thing, like many other "new" things to come in future.
That seems like a stupid rant in order to boost up the hype around ajax.
Read radical news here
AJAX is not some magical voodoo that is somehow uniquely capable of bringing down a web server. All it is is a means for doing an HTTP request, just like for a web page, in the background, without re-requesting and re-rendering the whole page. That's it. Just HTTP requests to a web server.
If you want to use it to make a web page that hits the server on every mouse click, you can. That's your business. But you could also code it up the traditional, non-AJAX way, to also hit the web server on every mouse click. AJAX is no more the problem than submitting forms is.
I must say, our existing CGI-based solution worked far better.
That's not an alternative to AJAX. I'm building an AJAX app that is serviced via CGI. CGI is just a way to respond to a web request. Whether a form post, a get request, or an AJAX request. It sounds like you don't really know what you're talking about.
Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
Not quite true. You can use an XMLHttpRequest to pull data from any site, if you know where in the document to look. Even if the page returned isn't well-formed XML, you can still screen-scrape, then put the data to use on your page.
Glad to hear you run your own company. I work for someone else, and for intranet use, browser configurations are standardized organization-wide, and they're absolutely demanding AJAX/JavaScript apps. They don't want the hassles of distributing and upgrading and troubleshooting on individual workstations any more thick-client apps than they have to. They want the new ones all browser-based. And they don't want the flashing, page-reloading, old-fashioned "standard html output" experience, they want the new desktop app like feel, that Google and others have given them a taste of.
Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
For intranets you're much better off using flash or flex than ajax. Better features to development time ratio. It's more or less like building a desktop app by now, except that you are limited in the number of protocols you can use to communicate with the server.
The original claim was that AJAX was the "ultimate client-side technology" and if I have to be pedantic to explain why it's not then so be it. Is AJAX an improvement over the absence of it? Sure, I never claimed to the contrary, but this also not the line of discussion.
I described a couple attributes of what would be "more ultimate" since AJAX clearly is being used (or is trending that way) for things it can't do and is based entirely on non-standardly implemented languages.
And for that my post gets labeled as FUD... If down-playing a buzzword "technology" that gets pawned as "the killer app" gets me labeled as a pedanticist and a FUD-spreader, well, then I'll take one for the team to do so.
Long live vim and "position:fixed".
:wq
Ajax may be nifty, but for all intensive purposes it should be a last resort for enterprise applications. Most large corporate applications should consider 508 compliance and web accessibility guidelines. With that said, one simple requirement of accessibility renders Ajax useless -- an application must work without javascript! Its true that postbacks and page loads may be a pain and may be slow under heavy loads, but Ajax is not the accessible solution. From the VERY little that I've read about Curl...it seems to be a much better solution...at least the content is actually loaded and not dynamically created in the DOM. On the other hand there is the issue of applets. Anyone agree, know a little more about Curl, or other accessible solutions?