The AJAX with jQuery training course covers some of the basics for using AJAX, dealing with server and client AJAX controls, how to use the Update Panel controls, page methods and other items. The AJAX Control Toolkit section will explain the controls, extenders, and script manager. The next part of the course explores the jQuery Library, which Microsoft has fully embraced as its client-side JavaScript library. You will learn about the library and how to put it to use, including how to write effective selectors to create matched sets of elements.
You will then learn to bring a page alive with jQuery, using features like changing page content, animating elements on the page, and using the jQuery UI Library for even more effects. One of the original motivations for jQuery was to support AJAX, and the library includes rich support for asynchronous calls to the server. You will also learn how to make use of various other jQuery extensions and see how to build your own plugin.
By attending AJAX with jQuery workshop, delegates will learn to:
- Understand a few of the more interesting features in JavaScript that will help write code that runs in the browser
- Utilize server and client-side components of ASP.NET AJAX
- Use techniques to avoid full page postbacks that flash in the browser and which can be intolerably slow for a user
- Use multiple UpdatePanel controls with a Web application
- Hook into the browser’s history feature with a Web application
- Understand jQuery integration in .NET
- Create animations and effects using jQuery
- Use standard and custom jQuery Extensions
This AJAX with jQuery class assumes that ou are familiar and experienced with Microsoft’s .NET Framework and ASP.NET development tools. You should be familiar with Web development and understand how HTTP and HTML work to produce Web pages for the user. You should have experience writing applications with ASP.NET 4.0 or later Web forms, and be familiar with how ASP.NET processes page requests, and have strong experience with .NET Framework 4.0 or later programming. You should have experience with Visual Studio 2010 or later for building Web application projects. Experience with building database applications using these tools will be helpful, although not strictly necessary. You should also have some experience with writing JavaScript.
This AJAX with jQuery class is ideal for ASP.NET developers who are interested in implementing AJAX and jQuery functionality within their websites.
