Modern Web Practices
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Completed on 2014-11-10
About the Book
In its infancy, web development used to be simple. A developer who knew a bit of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript could compete in a fledgling market.
Then libraries like jQuery and prototype gave web developers a taste for dynamic HTML, while AJAX reduced the web server to an API.
The browser, once a thin client, gained weight. HTML5, CSS3, and ECMAScript5 filled the developer’s toolbox with powerful new tools for creating application data, presentation, and behavior.
An explosion of open source projects (and some proprietary extensions) sprung to life around these advancements. Suddenly the World Wide Web became a much more complex place for developers. Web applications now rival the capabilities of many desktop applications, and must function in a wide range of browsers on an even wider range of devices.
The modern web is no longer simple. And those who code for it can't be either.
Table of Contents
- Automate Your Workflow with Grunt -- Aaron Bushnell
- Offline Web Applications -- Nicholas Cloud
- Data Binding -- Ryan Conaway
- Making Things Move with CSS3 Transitions and Animations -- Trevan Hetzel
- HTML and CSS Bad Practices -- Ted Waller
- Bower in Practice: A Package Manager for the Web -- Bob Yexley
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