iMav wrote:
> Rapid Web Applications with TurboGears: Using Python to Create
> Ajax-Powered Sites  (of course)
>   
Yes, it's very good. Of course you would also read the (online) docs of
FormEncode, MochiKit, SQLAlchemy, Kid, maybe IPython and CherryPy
> Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML (seems to be praised widely on Amazon)
>   
I don't know this one

> JavaScript: The Definitive Guide (it's "definitive", how can I go
> wrong?)  :)
>   
Yes, it's very good.
Pair it with "Cascading Style Sheets: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition"
by Eric Meyer

For the ajax part, something like "Ajax Design Patterns" by Michael
Mahemoff could be useful.


Also, do you need a sound background on databases, and maybe you are one
of those fellows who dare to say mysql could not be the best tool for
every project?

If so, two picks among many:

"Data Modeling Essentials, Third Edition" by Graeme Simsion & Graham Witt
"The Art of SQL" by Stephane Faroult, Peter Robson
(warning: on DB matters, from here, the limit is the sky)

And to better understand what the various sqlalchemy and TG patterns are
about:

"Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture"
by Martin Fowler, David Rice, Matthew Foemmel, Edward Hieatt, Robert
Mee, Randy Stafford

which should be mandatory reading for every CS practitioner on the planet.



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