On Aug 2, 2009, at 4:53 AM, Nitin Borwankar <[email protected]> wrote:
Paul Joseph Davis wrote:
[...]
Well, for jquery with couchdb I'd just point people at
jquery.couch.js for most answers. Though that could be me being
lazy. Feel free to add where you think is appropriate. The wiki is
a wiki after all. :)
For people like me coming from a very rudimentary UI experience
level - a slower descent into the hel.. er I mean depths of jquery
is preferred :-).
I love jQuery but the more advanced syntax is a steep curve for a
few days.
I tried the jquery.couch.js approach first - but just the number of
concepts to be assimilated before I could get one thing done were
too much.
The functional syntax takes some getting used to and just trying to
figure what scope I am in at each line of the code is mind twisting.
Most jQuery tutorials are focused on DOM manipulation whereas my
first interest is/was making calls to couch and getting json back -
this usually comes towards th end of a jQuery book and I'd like to
create a page or two of simple jQuery ajax in the context of couch.
Starting from a bare $.ajax call level is useful - the syntactic
sugar of jQuery is actually very useful - I just found it way too
much all at once to also assimilate the plug in concepts as well.
Additionally getting the paths straightened out when adding your own
libs or using the internal ones is another thing.
Perhaps a tutorial db that comes with couch and has a bunch of
sample docs, simplest to more complicated, with libs, attachments,
sample data would be useful.
I remember when I was at Sybase ( it is still true ) they had a
"pubs" sample database that was installed with the server and was
useful in learning an in testing. Sybase training classes were
based on the "pubs" database as well. I know the test data base is
supposed to be similar but a testing environment is not always
conducive to learning for many people. I'd like to float the idea
of a database with sample data, code and docs that can be replicated
from couch.io, or just comes with couch ( to save couch.io the
bandwidth charges ).
In the meanwhile I can start something on the wiki - in my copious
spare time.
I'm fairly I intrigued by the idea of a standard test database. At the
moment all tests build up their required test data. There could be a
couple issues in terms of mechanics but having a couple example
databses that could be cloned or some such might end up making tests
quite a bit more straight forward.
Anyone else have thoughts?
Paul, thanks again for putting up with the noise while I stumbled
around the basement banging my head everywhere.
Nitin
Paul
Nitin