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Jonathan Snook, Aaron Gustafson, Stuart Langridge, and Dan Webb

"Accelerated DOM Scripting with Ajax, APIs, and Libraries"


The XHR object was originally created by Microsoft as an ActiveX object back in 2000.
Mozilla went on to create a native implementation of XHR in 2002; since then, Safari and
Opera have added support for it.
Ajax in itself is fairly straightforward, but handling all the contingencies might not be
obvious. JavaScript libraries provide a framework for handling successful calls and problem
calls (timeouts, for example). Chapter 5 will discuss Ajax in more detail.
Strings and Templating
When you work with Ajax-based web applications, you frequently take data that has been
received from the server and place it on the page somehow. The quickest way to do it is to
receive a full HTML snippet from the server and just plunk it on the page. However, that
process isn??™t very practical. You end up using a lot of bandwidth just to send a little bit of data.
Templating solves this problem by enabling data received from the server to be quickly
merged with a template and then embedded in the page.
Additionally, web programming constantly uses strings, and having ways to filter, capitalize,
or camel case strings can be extremely handy.
Here??™s an example using Prototype to combine a data set with a template to create a list of
links:
CHAPTER 4 n LIBRARIES 83