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Java Web Development with Stripes
Mark Eagle shows how to put together a basic Stripes framework and discusses the framework's integration with Ajax and Spring.
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Mastering Ajax, Part 9: Using the Google Ajax Search API
Making asynchronous requests isn't just about talking to your own server-side programs. You can also communicate with public APIs like those from Google or Amazon, and add more functionality to your Web applications than just what your own scripts and server-side programs provide. In this article, Brett McLaughlin teaches you how to make and receive requests and responses from public APIs like those supplied by Google.
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Build an Ajax application using Google Web Toolkit, Apache Derby, and Eclipse, Part 2: The reliable back end
In this second article in the series on using the Google Web Toolkit (GWT) to build Asynchronous JavaScript + XML (Ajax) applications, learn how to build the Apache Derby database for your Web application, and use it to drive the GWT. Part 1 of this series introduced you to GWT and demonstrated how you can use it to create a rich-client front end for a Web application. This time, you'll go behind the scenes and learn about setting up the back end with your database and the code used to convert the data to a format that GWT can use. By the end of this article, you'll be ready for the front end and back end to talk to each other.
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Introduction to Ajax for Page Authors
This article focuses on page authors and describes various techniques that you can use to add Ajax functionality to a web page.
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Ajax and XML: Five cool Ajax widgets
With the Web 2.0 wave came a whole new emphasis on the user experience. Part of that experience is the development novel ways to interact with and present information to users. Often, these new interfaces are called widgets and use Asynchronous JavaScript + XML (Ajax) to communicate with the server. Discover five widgets that you can use to enhance the interactivity of your site.
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How to Make AJAX Read between the Lines
Your site may contain a wealth of technical terms. The user while viewing it may have to wonder about their meaning. What can be done to provide site visitors with instant answers to the questions they have? Previously technical terms were represented as links so that users could click them and get a definition window. This approach, however, is rather clumsy and time-consuming: one has to click the link, wait for the definition window to load and then close it. Now with AJAX we can move closer to users’ expectations. We can make the message window appear instantly once the mouse is over the term and disappear when the mouse moves farther. This service will not affect the size of your web-pages. When the contextual help is required Java Script will get definition from an external dictionary and display it
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Build Ajax into your Web apps with Rails
Ruby on Rails provides an excellent platform for building Web applications. Discover how to use the built-in Asynchronous JavaScript(TM) + XML (Ajax) features of the platform to give your application the Web 2.0 rich user interface experience.
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Services orchestration for AJAX
In this article, Masayuki Otoshi proposes to execute process definition on the client-side for AJAX. The approach allows you to create more complex AJAX Web applications with the same level of productivity and reusability as on the server-side.
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Ease AJAX development with the Google Web Toolkit
This article discusses the basics of GWT and shows how Java developers can use the GWT to create a simple AJAX application to retrieve search results from a remote API to display in a browser.
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Tapestry Ajax application
A basic starter application on using Tacos components in Tapestry for AJAX behaviour. This is a complete startup application with some explanations of the concepts involved and can be used to further develop using these technologies.
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Database-enabled Ajax with PHP
Learn how to Bridge the Gap Between Ajax and the Database with PHP.
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Creating an Ajax-Enabled Application, a Phase Listener Approach
This is the fourth in a short series of articles that add Ajax functionality to a Java EE web application developed in the NetBeans IDE. This article describes a phase listener approach to building the custom component. In this approach, the component's resources are packaged with the component in a .jar file that is bundled with the web application. The resources are served through a phase listener on the server. To distinguish this approach from the previous one in the example project, it is called CompB.
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Dynamic Webpages with JSON
Some Websites span multiple domains and use different technologies to deliver content to visitors - thus complicating the design of a consolidated solution that delivers dynamic features. This article proposes a JSON-based design approach that asynchronously delivers features to Webpages. Unlike AJAX, JSON does not have cross-domain restrictions.
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Mastering Ajax, Part 8: Using XML in requests and responses
In the last article of the series,you saw how your Ajax apps can format requests to a server in XML. You also saw why, in most cases, that isn't a good idea. This article focuses on something that often is a good idea: returning XML responses to a client.
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Creating an Ajax-Enabled Application, a Component Approach
This is the third in a short series of articles that adds Ajax functionality to a Java EE web application developed in the NetBeans IDE.
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