On Mon, 2007-22-01 at 16:55 +0100, Marco Mariani wrote:
> 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.

That's the one I've heard the best reviews of too. But haven't purchased
yet.

> 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)

Awesome, I was going to ask for recos in that department. I have a
decent MySQL reference. "MySQL" by Paul DuBois is excellent and massive,
but does not use python and is not a general DB/sql design and use book.



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