1) honestly ive never heard about JSON before :D
2) after little searching ive find supported browsers:
"Internet Explorer 5.0 and up, Opera 7.6 and up, Netscape 7.1 and up, Firefox 1.0 and up, Safari 1.2 and up" So i think that ajax support is not problem at all. Anyway you can on page load (onLoad()) try to make ajax object. In case of problem you can redirect to other page... or so.
3) i dont understand to your question, sry

d.



On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 00:51:02 +0200, Peter Locke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Thanks, that script seems simple and effective.  Also I agree with your
anti-XML sentiments, and not just in AJAX.

A couple questions -

1) Where does JSON come into play and when/why would one use it?
2) Is there a way to gracefully handle the situation where a browser does not
support an AJAX call?  A popup error isn't really a good solution for an
enterprise level e-commerce site.
3) Has anyone used the AJAX functions in the prototype JavaScript library,
and how do they compare to this?

I will be attending the AJAX conference in Boston next month, if anyone else
is planning to be there from this list drop me an email.


-----Original Message-----
From: dizzi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 21, 2006 3:49 PM
To: Velocity Users List
Subject: Re: AJAX and Velocity (again, building on the previous posts)

Hmm i dont know why i've deleted that .js file :)

Link works fine again now :)

http://klokan.sh.cvut.cz/~dizzi/ajax.js

Notice that 1st link from my post below continues on next line, anyway i've
shorten it for you :)

http://tinyurl.com/hahrg

d.

On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 23:57:08 +0200, Peter Locke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

I was going to post a similar 'any tips on using AJAX and Velocity
together'
topic when I noticed there was already some coverage on the mailing list.
Unfortunately all the links below seem to be dead.  I read Will's
comments as below, but unfortunately I think they are a bit over my
head and that means I
need to learn some basic Ajax.  Does anyone have a good place to start?
We
already use the prototype JavaScript library for other non-ajax
reasons, so I
would like to leverage that if it makes sense to do so.   There are many
Ajax
helper frameworks out there that claim to be great and make life
easier
- is
that true and is there a particular one I should look to integrate
into our codebase?

Any tips for an experienced J2EE/velocity engineer but AJAX rookie
would be appreciated.

Peter.



I use Velocity with Ajax to generate the server-side responses.  More
commonly I do JSON responses but have also done XML.  For me, the
Velocity does no parsing, merely generates the AJAX reponse like it
would any other text.   It's convenient to specify a few lines of
velocity, save it to my web directory, then retrieve with an AJAX
call.

WILL

-----Original Message-----
From: Gyanesh M Khanolkar [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, August 25, 2006 11:22 PM
To: 'Velocity Users List'
Subject: RE: AJAX anyone?

Thanks all for your mails. For a starter like me, your mails have
saved me a lot of time.

Cheers!!!
G

-----Original Message-----
From: dizzi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 26, 2006 4:08 AM
To: Velocity Users List
Subject: Re: AJAX anyone?

Ehm i dont understand why you are using xml. In most cases its useles
(or nuke on fly ;). Using rendered html fragments is usually straight
solution

Check this:
http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2005/10/27/sprinkle-ajax-magic-into-
struts
-webapp.html?page=3

http://klokan.sh.cvut.cz/~dizzi/ajax.js
you can get this script - its slightly edited script from url above
(ive fixed some bugs with form handling and parameter encoding)

anytime you can get robust package like dojo - check this url:
http://www.firstpartners.net/red-piranha/knowledgebase/AjaxJavaLibrari
es


Best regards d.


On Fri, 25 Aug 2006 23:54:03 +0200, Gyanesh M Khanolkar
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hi,


I have been playing around with AJAX only to find the nightmare of
handling XML based Server responses. The pain area for any AJAX
developer seems to be parsing and embedding XML data inside a HTML
code that is eventually sits within a JavaScript. It makes life HELL
for developing and maintaining AJAX based sites when we have HTML +
XML handing code within a JavaScript.


I seem to find the idea of using Velocity for AJAX based solutions
MUCH better to the ones many have been talking about. I think its
cool to shoot out the HTML code from template directly to the browser
which will just blindly paste it inside the right HTML pocket. Also
when running in a cached mode, I think we can achieve the desired
response levels as well !! Now this is cool !!!


Anyone in the Dev community here also share the same views as I do?
Are there any issues you think that I should consider when including
Velocity for AJAX based solutions?


Thanks,

Gyanesh




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