Make sure to get the O'Reilly Javascript The definative Guide as a companion
to it, and quite possibly the O'Reilly DHTML book too. The Javascript Bible
is good for a lot, but the combination is much better.
Just my 2 cents
Heath
-----Original Message-----
From: Hal Helms [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 11:24 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: OT: Learning Javascript Books,
I think Danny Goodman's JavaScript Bible is also fantastic. The thing I
appreciate most is the painstaking research he did on what differences there
are among browsers and versions.
Hal Helms
== See www.ColdFusionTraining.com for info on "Best Practices with
ColdFusion & Fusebox" training, Jan 22-25 ==
-----Original Message-----
From: Billy Cravens [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 11:17 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: OT: Learning Javascript Books,
O'Reilly's JavaScript: The Definitive Guide
It's not a fun or easy read like For Dummies, etc books, but it teaches
you the language from the grounds up, as opposed to the typical approach
of only covering basic form validation and DHTML. Plus the reference
section is excellent.
--
Billy
Michael wrote:
>
> Any recommendations, Please
>
> Thanks
>
> Michael
>
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Structure your ColdFusion code with Fusebox. Get the official book at
http://www.fusionauthority.com/bkinfo.cfm
Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists