Michael Schuerig a écrit :
> I take it that everyone serious about using Prototype & Co. already has 
> Christophe's (Porteneuve) Prototype and Script.aculo.us book. Apart 

Awww, you sweet pea :-)  That should make for about 2K serious people 
out there, then :-)  So far.

> object-oriented JS using state of the art programming idioms. I'm not 
> psyched by the second part, Design Patterns. It serves as an 
> introduction, although I'd recommend the classic Design Patterns book 
> by Gamma et al. to get the full treatment of considerations when and 
> why to use patterns.

Plus, design patterns seem to me like they usually are most useful on 
significant code masses, and wen we're constrained by static typing.  I 
used them a lot in Java/JEE work, but seldom find the need to roll out 
my own DP implementation in JS or Ruby, for instance.  So I guess this 
part of the book may be of interest to framework authors more than to 
framework users, for instance.

-- 
Christophe Porteneuve aka TDD
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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