Max Kiesler - Designer
Latest mHub
Feb 16, 06
Mastering Ajax, Part 2: Make asynchronous requests with JavaScript and Ajax - Most Web applications use a request/response model that gets an entire HTML page from the server. The result is a back-and-forth that usually involves clicking a button, waiting for the server, clicking another button, and then waiting some more. With Ajax and the XMLHttpRequest object, you can use a request/response model that never leaves users waiting for a server to respond. In this article, Brett McLaughlin shows you how to create XMLHttpRequest instances in a cross-browser way, construct and send requests, and respond to the server.
Page 1 of 1 pages
mHub Categories
Accessible AJAX,
Accordions,
Agile Design,
AJAX,
AJAX / Javascript Editors,
AJAX and Java,
AJAX and XML,
AJAX Auto-Complete,
AJAX Blogs,
AJAX Calculators,
AJAX Calendars,
AJAX Chat,
AJAX Contact Forms,
AJAX Demos,
AJAX Drag and Drop,
AJAX Email,
AJAX File Uploaders,
AJAX Flash,
AJAX Forms,
AJAX Frameworks and Toolkits,
AJAX Galleries,
Ajax Keyword Suggest,
AJAX Libraries,
AJAX Lightboxes,
AJAX Live Grids,
AJAX Live Search,
AJAX Login Systems,
AJAX Menus,
AJAX Patterns,
AJAX Presentations,
AJAX Rating Systems,
AJAX RSS,
AJAX Security,
AJAX Slides,
AJAX Slideshows,
AJAX Suveys,
AJAX Tabs,
AJAX Tooltips,
AJAX Tutorials,
AJAX Undo,
CSS,
DOM,
Flash,
Frameworks,
History Management,
Infinite Scroll,
Javascript,
Layout Managers,
Mapping,
Microformats,
Rails,
Rails Blog Apps,
Rails CMS Apps,
Rails Wiki Apps,
Ruby,
Ruby Blogs,
Ruby on Rails File Uploaders,
Services Orchestration,
Toolkits,
Transclusions,
Web 2.0,
XMLHttpRequest,
Search
Advanced Search