-- thurting <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
(on Thursday, 15 May 2008, 09:40 AM -0700):
> I'm on a deadline at the moment, but will post once things slow down.
> 
> In any case, one of the things I've done with it so far is use it to drive
> an inventory manager.  In my app, each product page has a list of variants
> and their information.  Using AjaxContext I was able to quickly set up a
> working solution that allowed one to CRUD product variants directly within
> the product page.  Nothing fancy, and not necessary, but it gives the app a
> smooth and intuitive desktop feel.  Also, it is 100% degradable, so no JS =
> no problem - ZF takes care of the dirty work.  I was amazed at how fast I
> set this up using JQuery and ZF.

That's great to hear! The main impetus I had behind creating AjaxContext
and ContextSwitch was exactly this sort of degradation -- the actions
should continue to operate fine on their own, but should also be able to
respond differently based on the request context. I'm glad that you're
finding that to be the case.

I'd love to see a tutorial from you showing this at some point, if you'd
be willing to write one!

> Matthew Weier O'Phinney-3 wrote:
> > 
> > -- thurting <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> > (on Wednesday, 14 May 2008, 11:16 PM -0700):
> >> Seriously.  Thank you.
> > 
> > Glad you like it!
> > 
> > I'd love to see some examples of what you're doing with it; so far, the
> > only examples are things *I've* done with it, which aren't all that
> > impressive so far. :-)

-- 
Matthew Weier O'Phinney
Software Architect       | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Zend - The PHP Company   | http://www.zend.com/

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