7/1/2023 0 Comments Douglas crockford books> with things but not address the real things JS is made to play with. > and not mention functions that address CSS & DOM? Weird. But, how can he write a book on the good parts of > I like Douglas Crockford (because I am a crabby old man too plus he > This shall perhaps be the world's shortest book review (for one of the > Crockford's JavaScript, The Good Parts (a book review). JavaScript Application Cookbook by Bradenbaugh (O’Reilly, 1999) (an Good examplesĪnd an oldie I still do not regret having read: If you don't like any of those books, you must be nuts. JavaScript Bible (5th ed.) by Goodman and Morrison (Wiley, 2004) and The JavaScript Anthology 101 Essential Tips, … by Edwards and Adams JavaScript, the Definitive Guide (5th ed.) by Flanagan (O’Reilly,Ģ006) (I also read and worked through the earlier 4th ed., 2002) Simply JavaScript by Yank and Adams (Sitepoint, 2007)ĬSS, DHTML, & Ajax (4th ed.) by Teague (Peachpit, 2007) Pro JavaScript Techniques by Resig (Apress, 2006) JavaScript Phrasebook by Wenz (Sams, 2007) The Art and Science of JavaScript by Adams et al (Sitepoint, 2008) JQuery in Action by Bibeault & Kayz (Manning, 2008) Pro JavaScript Design Patterns by Harmes & Dias (Apress,2008) OTHER rather recent books I found plenty of reason to enjoy > examples of manipulating CSS and the DOM. Crockford there ARE good books) and what made them good was excellent
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