I suggest Rebecca Murphey's online book jQuery Fundamentals which includes a lot of JavaScript best practices, especially Chapter 10: Code Organization.
http://jqfundamentals.com/legacy#chapter-10 On Saturday, January 19, 2013 2:30:55 AM UTC-8, Marco Faustinelli wrote: > > > The jQuery pitfall is to ... just start hacking. The moment you are > juggling jQuery stuff to patch sloppy HTML created at runtime by last > month's jQuery stuff, then you are back to square one. > > If you are being "forced" :-) to move processing to the browser, the book > I recommend is "Single Page Web Applications", ed. Manning. > > It provides a useable solution in pure Javascript, based on the module > pattern (see "JS: The Good Parts", already endorsed elsewhere). It still > uses jQuery for event mgmt and -simple- DOM selectors, but here jQuery is > meant as a tool not as the driver, which it never should be. > > [If you asked me, I'd say JS development is definitely NOT a shame. JS is > a great language. But this is OT.] :-) > > > > On Thursday, January 17, 2013 12:33:54 PM UTC+1, Jan Goyvaerts wrote: >> >> And it has come to that - forced into JS development ! Shame ! :-p >> >> But I've got to admit jquery allows you to pull off tricks that would be >> very difficult server side. so there's no escaping it any more. ;-) >> >> Can somebody recommend lecture for both the subjects ? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Jan >> >> >> >> >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Java Posse" group. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/javaposse/-/olbhujzAZIAJ. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/javaposse?hl=en.
