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Domscripting.com - DOM Scripting Blog @ 1800 RSSFeeds.Com

Site URL: http://www.domscripting.com/
Feed Description: Get latest news for website designing with JavaScript from this RSS feed and become most informed about all tools and technology related with it. This feed is giving most useful information about document object model in further. Everyone can get investigative editorials and knowledgeable notes about JavaScript and web developing from here.
Feed URL: http://www.domscripting.com/blog/rss.php
Site Title: DOM Scripting: Web Design with JavaScript and the Document Object Model
Language: en
 

Domscripting RSS Details

 
HTML5 For Web Designers
DOM Scripting was my first book. It came out five years ago. Two years after that, I wrote Bulltetproof Ajax. Now I’ve written a third book. It’s called HTML5 for Web Designers and you can pre-order it now from the greatest publishers on the web, A Book Apart. It’s not a long book, by design. It’s got just enough to get you up to speed with the new shininess in HTML5. For a book about a ...

One Point Four
The latest version of jQuery has been released, just in time for the framework’s fourth birthday. Version 1.4 looks like a speedy improvement on its predecessors. If you have an iPhone or an iPod Touch, be sure to check out this very nifty jQuery reference app. It doesn’t take long to install and, best of all, it doesn’t involve the app store at all—the whole thing is buil...

Fully Frontalled
Last Friday, the Full Frontal conference took place here in Brighton. It was like having the circus come to town …but with fewer acrobatics and more closures. In short, it was superb. I’ve been to quite a few conferences in my time so I can get pretty jaded but this was a textbook lesson in how to put on a great event. The content was top-notch. The fact that the whole day was focuse...

November Spawned A Monster
November is shaping up to be a very busy month for JavaScript. Fronteers 2009 is a two-day event in Amsterdam on November 5th and 6th. John Resig and Douglas Crockford—that alone makes it worth the price of admission. Straight after that, JSConf.eu takes place in Berlin on November 7th and 8th. It’s a tight squeeze but it would possible to go to both events with a train ride in-between. I wo...

Full Frontal
I remember when I spoke at the first @media conference in London in 2005, mine was the only talk related to JavaScript. Just a few short years later, there was an entire @media spin-off conference devoted to JavaScript: the slightly-inaccurately named @media Ajax. JavaScript has come a long way in the past few years. This year’s be-there-or-be-square JavaScript event is the newly-announced Full...

Unobtrusify
A little while back, Phil Hawksworth, a very smart web developer at Osmosoft, created Unobtrusify.com. It’s a self-describing and rather lovely-looking ode to semantic markup, appropriate CSS and unobtrusive JavaScript. You can read all about how it was made or you can simply go and play around with it …go ahead; click on stuff. Phil’s co-worker Paul Downey is responsible for s...

Happy Birthday, JQuery!
jQuery was first released on January 14th, 2006. Now, precisely three revolutions of planet Earth later, jQuery 1.3 is out. This release features some significant changes and improvements. There’s all the usual speed improvements, of course, but what I like in particular is the way that jQuery is ditching browser sniffing in favour of feature detection. That’s the way to do it. The way the c...

Pasty
A paste bin is a very handy tool when you’re working as part of a team, especially if there’s any remote work involved. Basically, they’re web-based clipboards where you can paste in snippets of text—JavaScript, CSS, markup or whatever—and then share the URL in an email or a chat message (a lot cleaner than pasting code straight into an email or chat window). Often yo...

Standalone Selector
John Resig is a machine. Not content with dividing his time between working on jQuery and working on Firebug, he’s also got another few irons in the fire. Just for kicks, John has created a standalone selector engine called Sizzle. It’s not quite ready for prime time yet but it looks very promising. It uses the CSS syntax that has helped make jQuery such a popular library. Right now, ...

The Need For Speed
Another day, another incremental release of jQuery. This one is sporting 13% faster CSS selectors and 103% faster event handlers. Meanwhile, as the JavaScript libraries continue to evolve and improve, the browser engines are also focusing on speed improvements. Dave Hyatt and the WebKit gang have announced a brand new JavaScript engine called SquirrelFish. This looks like being about 60% faster t...

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