Best book for me were jQuery In Action and Learning jQuery.
On May 18, 3:37 pm, alex <boba...@googlemail.com> wrote: > Ah. I'm sure this sounds dunce-y because 'jQuery does it for me', but > is a solid grounding in Javascript necessary to a solid grounding in > jQuery (or at least, being able to use jQuery), or just good > practice? > > I would guess, as a complete novice, that just using what is already > available may not require pure JS knowledge, but more advanced things > like building plugins would? I assume then that 'Learning jQuery' > would not be the first port of call for me? > > On May 18, 2:55 pm, mdk <mklosterme...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Yes, but because he has no JS he will like have a tough time. I would > > read a basic JS book first, then go for Learning jQuery 1.3. > > > Mike > > > On May 18, 8:35 am, Karl Swedberg <k...@englishrules.com> wrote: > > > > I've heard Learning jQuery 1.3 is a great read, too. ;-) > > > > --Karl > > > > ____________ > > > Karl Swedbergwww.englishrules.comwww.learningjquery.com > > > > On May 18, 2009, at 9:07 AM, MorningZ wrote: > > > > > I always recommend "jQuery in Action".... it's a great read > > > > > On May 18, 3:19 am, alex <boba...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > >> Just wondering what your opinions are on the best book out there, for > > > >> a beginner, to learn jQuery? I know HTML and CSS well enough, but > > > >> have > > > >> no javascript knowledge. > > > > >> Thanks