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Ajax anyone know anything
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Originally posted by OrangeHopper View PostOff to technical with you!
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"A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George OrwellComment
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postmorning all,
one of the .net components is going to support ajax
I am told it will improve performance server side by upto 30%
anyone know anything about it ?
Milan.
If you cannot research this much, I am not too confident you can implement the technology.
Mind you, these days all programmers copy the code by googling for it.Vote Corbyn ! Save this country !Comment
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postthe big sell is that it will improve client side performance, what about that ?
Milan.
It saves screen refreshes, but it makes your http traffic bitty.Cooking doesn't get tougher than this.Comment
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Originally posted by dang65 View PostWell, presumably the Ajax calls to the server will just return a bit of JSON for the client JavaScript to deal with, thus avoiding all that .NET mumbo-jumbo completely - which has to be an improvement straight away.Cooking doesn't get tougher than this.Comment
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Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View PostIF you roll your own Ajax (which I do, by preference) you get nice trim efficient packets of data (JSON, XML, pipe-delimeted, whatever you want) - .NET Ajax has wrapped up the nice simple functionality in its usual MS Bloat, sends back Viewstate and a whole load of other gubbins with every call, and a whole load of gubbins comes back - much MUCH more than is actually required to implement the dynamic client changes.
It's worth noting that older kit can be painfully slow with Ajax stuff. It's something to consider if your site is aimed at Joe Public or international audiences. This is something the BBC hasn't cottoned on to with their "Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play." messages.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
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