PHP tutorials, html tutorial, photoshop tutorial, ajax tutorials,java tutorial, web design tips tutorials, css tutorial, visual basic tutorial, dreamweaver tutorial, php tutorial, html tutorials, c++ tutorial, javascript tutorial, windows tutorials, free flash tutorials, free photoshop source codes, sql tutorial
Web Development Tutorials, Programming Tutorials, PHP Script Index
Home | Forums | Downloads | Books | Submit Content | Links

Programming Articles

  PHP articles
  MySql articles
  Visual Basic.Net articles
  Java articles
  ASP articles
  ASP.Net articles
  Visual Basic articles
  CSS articles

Programming Tutorials

  PHP tutorials
  MySql tutorials
  Visual Basic.Net tutorials
  Java tutorials
  ASP tutorials
  ASP.Net tutorials
  Visual Basic tutorials
  HTML tutorials
  CSS tutorials

Programming Source Codes

  PHP scripts
  Visual Basic.Net scripts
  JavaScript scripts
  ASP scripts
  ASP.Net scripts
  Visual Basic scripts

Our Partners

  Free Resources
  Publisherbank
  Free Link Directory
  PHP Magazine
  Webmaster Passion
  Search Engine Bank
  Free Directory Site
  Free PHP Scripts
  Links Shopping Mart
  Variety Bazar
  Urdu Office Tutorials
  Evernew Scripts
  Evernew Scripts
  Evernew Directory
  Our Achievements
  Web templates
  Buy and Sell Templates
  Text Link Traders
  Directory Metro
  Gifts Choice
  Valentines Ecards
  Template Directory

What is Ajax

Date:2007-03-02

By Nipun Chadha

We were getting a number of querries from our clients and friends, asking about what AJAX is? With the development of Microsoft’s Live, everyone is going crazy about AJAX. So, we at Xaprio Solutions thaught of publishing this small article about AJAX, which will help you guys understand it better.

Like DHTML, LAMP, or SPA, Ajax is not a technology in itself, but a term that refers to the use of a group of technologies together. In fact, derivative/composite technologies based substantially upon Ajax, such as AFLAX, are already appearing. The Term AJAX refers to, Asynchronous JavaScript and XML.

For a number of tasks, only small amounts of data need to be transferred between the client and the server, allowing a number of Ajax applications to perform almost as well as applications executed natively on the user’s machine. This has the effect that pages need only be incrementally updated in the user’s browser, rather than having to be entirely refreshed. “Every user’s action that normally would generate an HTTP request takes the form of a JavaScript call to the Ajax engine instead”, wrote Jesse James Garrett, in the essay that first defined the term. “Any response to a user action that doesn’t require a trip back to the server — such as simple data validation, editing data in memory, and even some navigation — the engine handles on its own. If the engine needs something from the server in order to respond — if it’s submitting data for processing, loading additional interface code, or retrieving new data — the engine makes those requests asynchronously, usually using XML, without stalling a user’s interaction with the application.”

Traditional web applications essentially submit forms, completed by a user, to a web server. The web server does some processing, and responds by sending a new web page back. Because the server must send a whole new page each time, applications run more slowly and awkwardly than their native counterparts.

Ajax applications, on the other hand, can send requests to the web server to retrieve only the data that is needed, and may use SOAP or some other XML-based web services dialect. On the client, JavaScript processes the web server’s response, and may then modify the document’s content through the DOM to show the user that an action has been completed. The result is a more responsive application, since the amount of data interchanged between the web browser and web server is vastly reduced. Web server processing time is also saved, since much of it is done on the client.

The earliest form of asynchronous remote scripting, Microsoft’s Remote Scripting, was developed before XMLHttpRequest existed, and made use of a dedicated Java applet. Thereafter, remote scripting was extended by Netscape DevEdge at around 2001/2002 by use of an IFRAME instead of a Java applet.

http://blogs.xaprio.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Nipun_Chadha

 



Desclaimer | Privacy Policy | Submit Content | Links | Link to Us | Sitemap |Contact Us
Copyright Programming Tutorials, Web Development Tutorials, Source codes © All Rights are Reserved.
Powered By Evernew Solutions

Credit Card Consolidation - Flights - Cheap Flights - Scottsdale Landscaping