Klaus Hartl wrote:
> Of course you still have know that you have to pass a function reference 
> of some kind to click() and the like, but if you want to use an API you 
> should get familiar with it by reading the documentation to a certain 
> extend, be it a designer or a programmer. Fortunately jQuery has a 
> pretty good documentation.

In my opinion (as a programmer) the documentation is pretty good. But I 
can understand very well that a designer could have some problems 
getting into the language. I've been reading now the first two tutorials 
again and tried to look at them as a designer. I can imagine very well 
that a designer has some problems to understand them if already in one 
of the first sentences the expression "... we start adding events 
etc..." appears. I guess a designer does not know what events are.

The question is, should the 'beginner tutorials' cover only jQuery or JS 
in general as well?

As I said the documentation is good enough for me and I say thank you to 
everyone who wrote something. But I can understand very well if people 
without good programming knowledge have problems getting into jQuery.

-- Raffael

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