Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference, 3rd Edition
by Danny Goodman
CSS Cookbook, 2nd Edition
by Christopher Schmitt
JavaScript: The Definitive Guide, 5th Edition
by David Flanagan
Ajax: The Definitive Guide, 1st Edition
by Anthony T. Holdener III
PHP Cookbook, 2nd Edition
by Adam Trachtenberg; David Sklar
JavaScript: The Definitive Guide, 5th Edition
by David Flanagan
Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML
by Elisabeth Robson; Eric Freeman
JavaScript: The Good Parts, 1st Edition
by Douglas Crockford
HTML, XHTML, & CSS, Sixth Edition: Visual QuickStart Guide
by Elizabeth Castro
In today's Web 2.0 world, JavaScript and Dynamic HTML are at the center of the hot new approach to designing highly interactive pages on the client side. With this environment in mind, the new edition of this book offers bite-sized solutions to very specific scripting problems that web developers commonly face. Each recipe includes a focused piece of code that you can insert right into your application. Why is JavaScript & DHTML Cookbook so popular? After reading thousands of forum threads over the years, author and scripting pioneer Danny Goodman has compiled a list of problems that frequently vex scripters of various experience levels. For every problem he addresses, Goodman not only offers code, but a discussion of how and why the solution works. Recipes range from simple tasks, such as manipulating strings and validating dates in JavaScript, to entire libraries that demonstrate complex tasks, such as cross-browser positioning of HTML elements, sorting tables, and implementing Ajax features on the client. Ideal for novices as well as experienced scripters, this book contains more than 150 recipes for:
Working with interactive forms and style sheets
Presenting user-friendly page navigation
Creating dynamic content via Document Object Model scripting
Producing visual effects for stationary content
Positioning HTML elements
Working with XML data in the browser
Recipes in this Cookbook are compatible with the latest W3C standards and browsers, including Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 2, Safari, and Opera 9. Several new recipes provide client-side Ajax solutions, and many recipes from the previous edition have been revised to help you build extensible user interfaces for Web 2.0 applications. If you want to write your own scripts and understand how they work, rather than rely on a commercial web development framework, the JavaScript & DHTML Cookbook is a must.
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Based on 30 Ratings
A Good Book to Learn The Basics - 2008-06-10
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Like most web developers, I typically will reach for one of the many JS libraries when it comes time to add client-side enhancements to my web applications. This is usually the obvious choice for the sake of saving time on projects, and keeping costs down... but quite often, many libraries are simply overkill for a simple little js/dhtml enhancement.
As such, that is what lead me to this book. I was hoping the cookbook format would give me some fresh ideas on doing some simple js/dhtml work and it most definitively delivered.
Perhaps the most valuable parts of this book for me were the aspects of working on the DOM. Additionally, I always enjoy reading different techniques for dealing with client-side form validation.
To me the coverage on loading dynamic data/ajax was good, but I still think that when entering into that realm of JS, it is usually time to deploy one of the libraries I mentioned earlier.
All in all this has become a valuable resource that I often refer to during my daily work.
Not what I thought it would be. - 2008-07-14
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The book doesn't go in-depth in it's explainations. It is written more for the seasoned script writer and not the beginner. I found it very confusing and not enough detail to be of any use to me. I preferred "Javascript, Demystified".
JavaScript & DHTML Cookbook - 2009-04-20
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I can honestly say this is the best JavaScript reference I have ever read. The writing style is both engaging and informative. Every recipe presents solutions to common scripting problems that are browser neutral, and "best practices" style JavaScript. If you don't already own JavaScript & DHTML Cookbook (2nd edition), I suggest you make this your next purchase.
Very useful, lots of gems - 2009-06-19
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I'm a beginner/intermediate JS programmer and I found this book tremendously useful. I had to design a site for control and monitoring of an embedded device and this book more than paid for itself in the first few weeks. This is not for beginners, although I learned a great deal about the DOM and several JS browser-specific quirks simply by perusing the various "recipes". I would recommend that beginners start with a tutorial-style book first or some of the free online stuff, such as [...] and then get this book. If you use only a few of the recipes and it saves you time, its more than worth the price.
Good JS book - 2009-03-18
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Like most of the cookbooks, this is perfect for a new JS programmer - like me.
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