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- Ajax -- A guide for the perplexed, Part 2: Develop a Dojo-based blog reader by Gal Shachor, Ksenya Kveler, Maya Barnea - [Clicks: 123]
The previous installment of this series introduced you to Ajax development by walking through the practical information essential for getting an Ajax-enabled environment up and running. In this article, Part 2 of the series, the authors put your newly gained knowledge into practice by starting the development of a simple Dojo and Atom-based blog reader.
[Includes sample code]
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/wa-aj-basics2/index.html - Dec, 2007 - The Mojo of Dojo by Matthew Russell - [Clicks: 287]
An introduction to Dojo, a powerful JavaScript library intended to assist in chores such as AJAX functionality.
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2007/11/01/the-mojo-of-dojo.html - Nov, 2007 - Creating dynamic web applications with JSF/DWR/DOJO by Ashish Sarin - [Clicks: 439]
This article gives an approach on how JSF, DWR, DOJO can be integrated to create rich web applications which use Portlets and Facelets. It is assumed that the readers have a basic understanding of these frameworks and the features they provide.
http://www.infoq.com/articles/jsf-dojo-dwr - Oct, 2007 - Implementing client-side interportlet communication with Dojo and WebSphere Portal by Aron Wallaker - [Clicks: 339]
This article describes how to add client-side interportlet communication to your IBM WebSphere Portal (hereafter called WebSphere Portal) portlets using the Dojo JavaScript toolkit. It is intended for developers who are beginning to use Ajax with WebSphere Portal and want to replicate on the client the interportlet communication they have previously implemented on the server side. To make the best use of this tutorial, you should have a good understanding of JavaScript programming, WebSphere Portal, and portlet development. See Resources for references which can help you gain this knowledge. The sample portlet application for this article was developed using IBM Rational Application Developer v7 and was tested on WebSphere Portal V6.0.
[Includes sample code]
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/library/techarticles/0703_wallaker/0703_wallaker.html - Mar, 2007
- Get Up and Running with Dojo by Matthew Russell - [Clicks: 376]
In this exciting era of Web 2.0 development, Dojo pushes the boundaries of the possible with snazzy user interfaces that can be quickly implemented and easily maintained. This comprehensive overview to creating object-oriented widgets with Dojo 0.9+ tackles the most foundational Dojo design concepts-leaving you poised for productivity and efficiency, and ready to achieve superior results. Read on to explore the depths of inheritance and encapsulation, learn the most common pitfalls (before you fall prey to them), and begin your Dojo journey on rocksolid footing. You've been developing with Dojo for a while? No problem; you'll still benefit from a thorough review of the fundamentals now that 0.9 has landed.
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/9780596517052/ - Oct, 2007 - (PDF) - The Definitive Guide to Apache MyFaces and Ajax
by Martin Marinschek, Thomas Spiegl, Zubin Wadia - [Clicks: 530]
The "Definitive Guide to Apache MyFaces and Ajax" is an ideal reference if you’re looking to develop real-world applications with the open source lightweight Apache MyFaces and Dojo (the Ajax API). The book focuses less on theory and more on aspects like scalability, design, optimization, and configurability. This book emphasizes meeting real-world requirements for performance and scalability. It includes lucid code samples that reflect the pattern being described. The “In the Trenches” sections in each chapter give you advice and recommendations based on actual experiences with each pattern. What’s more, the “Extreme Extensions” section at the end of each relevant chapter is dedicated to a “freestyle” expression of taking a particular pattern or set of patterns to the max. (This is a great way for you to learn because of the magnification effect.) This is also the first book to embrace the Dojo framework for Ajax (soon to be an Apache project).
Apress, Paperback - Mar, 2007
- Develop a Web application using Ajax with Dojo and DB2 by Leons Petrazickis - [Clicks: 330]
Follow this case study for quickly creating an elegant, responsive Web application using IBM DB2 9 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows, XQuery, PHP, and the Dojo Javascript Framework. The case study is based on IOD Planner 2006, a Web application that was used for the IBM Information On Demand 2006 Global Conference. Learn the advantages of the Ajax approach and see, step by step, how to implement this kind of application.
[Formats: html, pdf]
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/edu/dm-dw-dm-0702petrazickis-i.html - Feb, 2007