tkz for the tip ;D
On 7/12/07, Jack Killpatrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This might be of interest to you, too: http://code.google.com/p/trimpath/wiki/JavaScriptTemplates It will get you around having to do stuff like: $.each(entry['model'], function(modIndex, mod){ result += '<li>'+ mod + '<\/li>'; }); I use it all the time for merging json data into "jst" templates (jst's are just plain text/html files with template stuff in them). Works great, is quite fast, too. I've used it for a large reporting project, with giant tables of data: rather than generating a bunch of html on the server and passing it to the client, I just pass json back and use trimpath and a jst to do the merge and a simple $('#myDiv').html(mergeResults); to dump the results to screen. More fun, IMO, than the various DOM-node building plugins, too. FYI, I usually use jquery $.get() to fetch the jst file from the server, rather than use textareas and such (which is what the simple demo's there show). - Jack GianCarlo Mingati wrote: > Hi all. > http://www.gcmingati.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/jsonhelicopters.html > > Here's what i learned form the book, chapter 6 (Ajax techniques). > I went faster than i expected. The book explains clearly and easily > how to dinamically insert content into a page... wow this is hooking > me as much as my r/c helicopters do. > Now i know i can use xml, json, plain html or even javascript files as > external 'data'. Personally the json methos seems the easier. > In the example my first page EVER with data from a separate json file. > Ciao! > I'm happy, i'm getting into this "web2.0" stuff with fun. > > > GC > > >
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