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Enrich Your Web Applications

By Akash Mehta
2008-02-24


Conclusion

So there you have it. A number of ways to enrich your web applications, using the tried-and-tested methods that survived the pace of the web 2.0 boom. For more design ideas, try these lists. The Ajaxian blog covers many effective JS behaviours as well. Yahoo also has a fantastic web design pattern library. covering just about anything you want to do with a web application.

The best way to learn more, however, is to explore! Visit some of the top sites on the web and observe the techniques they use. For example, many of the examples in this article come from Digg, and Yahoo! itself is generally very innovative. Observe the sites you visit daily, and bookmark anything interesting you find. You'll be building fantastic web applications in no time.



Tutorial Pages:
» Introduction
» The Rich Internet Application
» Our approach
» Design
» Behaviour
» Conclusion


Related Tutorials:
» Microsoft Complicates HTML Emails With Outlook 2007
» Testing Your Forms for Hijacking Vulnerability
» Control Your Domain Registration Data
» HTML Forms POST, GET
» HTML Tables
» Navigation Bar and Bulleted Lists

Recent Comments
BigAlReturns
February 24, 2008, 4:30 pm

An interesting read - the "Design" part could apply equally to any website in the world, but it was a nice review of some modern look styles. The only point I personally disagree on is buttons - if as a user I see a button, I expect that I am making a change to something. Seeing a link makes me think that I'm just going somewhere else. It's an extension of the whole POST for changing, GET for looking philosophy.
The behaviour section was well written, and definitely had some very Web 2.0ey techniques - I might have preferred to see a little more code thrown in though - for example, the date picker. You say plugins are available for jQuery etc., but how do I implement these? Can I do it without a JS library?
A nice read though, thanks!

Read all comments



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