Without a specific example (of you not getting an answer) I can't offer any suggestions. I will say that help here is voluntary and as a moderator I'm more focused on seeing people be civil to each other (which everyone here is) than making sure each and every post gets replied to.
You won't get an argument from me that jQuery is used more ubiquitously and that it's learning materials are more robust. It's also easier to learn. You give up a few things for that convenience though. See http://jqueryvsmootools.com for a break down. But one of the things you trade away by adopting a more advanced framework, a more low-level framework, is that it's harder to learn and consequently, there are fewer people using it. Anyone can use jQuery, but you need to know how to program to use MooTools and other frameworks out there... On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 4:39 PM, pixel67 <tony.brown....@gmail.com> wrote: > and it seems like you have to learn jQuery these days, I was trying use > backbone and it wouldn't work with moo, everything has jQuery baked into it > > > On Thursday, May 10, 2012 7:34:02 PM UTC-4, pixel67 wrote: >> >> well I saw a couple of un-answered questions, The thing is whenever I >> chime in on a post with a question; it just get's ignored, so when I do >> have a question I don't bother to ask. I am pretty new to mootools and to >> be honest I just started to learn jQuery because of the lack of good >> learning material for moo. I really like mootools' syntax it is just like >> Javascript, but there are very few good learning resources for beginners in >> general. >> I was getting the 'if you are learning go away and come back when you >> know something' kind of mentality. >> >> Thanks >> >> On Thursday, May 10, 2012 7:21:50 PM UTC-4, Sanford Whiteman wrote: >>> >>> Certainly it's okay. The list is pretty quiet, but I don't think it's >>> from lack of answers but lack of questions. >>> >>