Object Literal is a specification of EcmaScript... The most usefull
example of it is JSON. JSON is basicaly an "implementation" of OL...

Well, I'm not the best teacher for this... I'm learning it too.



On Feb 6, 2:06 pm, J Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, great screencast. (I think i learned a little portuguese too.)
>
> A question about literal objects - is it fundamentally different than
> using prototype?
>
> //
> // example 1: literal obj
> //
> var Counter = {
>   container = $('#counter');
>   start: 1,
>   init: function() { container.val(start); }
>
> }
>
> $(document).ready(function() {
>   Counter.init();
>
> });
>
> //
> // example 2: prototype obj
> //
> function Counter() {
>   var start = 1;
>   var container = $('#counter');
>
> };
>
> Counter.prototype.init = function(obj) {
>   this.container.val(this.start);
>
> };
>
> var c = new Counter();
> c.init();
>
> certainly the object literal method looks a bit cleaner. It is
> possible to create multiple instances? Any other advantages?
>
> -j
>
> On Feb 6, 9:59 am, rics <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > Here is a great screencast tutorial on how to better organize your js
> > code with Literal Objects and JQuery. The author is brazilian and he
> > talks portuguese, but you can follow and understand the tutorial
> > without any sound, just seeing what he do on screen.
>
> >http://www.tuliofaria.net/arquivos/videotutoriais/jsobjetoliteral/
>
> > Good luck!
> > rics

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