1. Open Web Podcast Episode 1

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (Aug 8 2008) Dojo Explore Article

    . I haven’t listened yet, but Alex Russell, John Resig and Dion Almaer all at once? Awesome. (Read Full Article)

    Comment on Article Mentions:   Dion Almaer   Alex Russell   John Resig

  2. Table Drag and Drop jQuery plugin

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (Jul 4 2008) jQuery Explore Article

    . Drag and drop of table rows is a special case (jQuery UI doesn’t seem to support it)—this plugin works pretty well though. (Read Full Article)

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  3. Deep Profiling jQuery Apps

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (Jun 16 2008) jQuery Explore Article

    Deep Profiling jQuery Apps. Neat plugin from John Resig that monkey-patches most (all?) of the jQuery methods to build up a detailed profile of which methods are being used by a given page. Posted 16th June 2008 at 10:20 am Tagged javascript, johnresig, jquery, profiling 1 comment 1. I think all of them, yeah. Well, at least all of the traditionally-chainable methods. Currently methods like jQuery.each(), jQuery.ajax(), etc. aren't touched. ... (Read Full Article)

    Comment on Article Mentions:   John Resig

  4. Unobtrusive JavaScript with jQuery

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (May 6 2008) jQuery Explore Article

    Simon Willison, 6th May 2008 Links and resources from a three hour tutorial presented at XTech 2008. SlideShare | View | Upload your own Tools: * Firebug extension * Insert jQuery - bookmarklet, drag to your browser toolbar * jQuery API docs * visualjquery.com Demos: 1. Sidenote popup in JavaScript 2. Sidenote popup with jQuery 3. Restaurant map with microformats (accompanying article) 4. labels.js with jQuery 5. Inline form help ... (Read Full Article)

    Comment on Article Mentions:   Javascript   Simon Willison

  5. Comet works, and it’s easier than you think

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (Dec 5 2007) Explore Article

    I gave a talk this morning at the Yahoo! Web Developer Summit on Comet, cometd and Bayeux. I’ve been trying to keep up with Comet ever since Alex coined the term last year, but it’s only in the past few weeks that I’ve actually found some time to play with it myself. I was very impressed with what I found: the open source infrastructure for building and deploying Comet applications ... (Read Full Article)

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  6. jQuery for JavaScript programmers

    Simon Willison’s Weblog (Aug 15 2007) jQuery Explore Article

    When jQuery came out back in January 2006, my first impression was that it was a cute hack. Basing everything around CSS selectors was a neat idea (see getElementsBySelector) but the chaining stuff looked like a bit of a gimmick and the library as a whole didnt look like it would cover all of the bases. I wrote jQuery off as a passing fad. Over the past few months its ... (Read Full Article)

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