Just to clarify - I do not know any programming languages . . .
I have begun to reverse engineer other plugins and macros, and I get
along ok until I come across some of the more advanced stuff (ELS,
Udo, Saq)
I have multiple Bible & Missing Manual reference books an my desk -
and typically I read through an entire, then go back and use it as a
reference.
Thank You for all of the input, I am hoping to jump into a book
sometime this month. Hopefully it will help me at least be able to
pick through other peoples creations and have a better understanding
of what I am looking at.
I have recently fallen in lust with fET, but also have begun to see
some of its limitations & quite a few examples from ELS on how you can
solve the same problems with just JS or inline JS in a more eloquent
manner.
Thanks,
Mike
On Mar 6, 3:38 am, Alex Hough <
r.a.ho...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> Mike,
>
> I have avoided spending on books for a couple of years. I thought I
> could learn from the web. Now I have a book - JavaScript the missing
> manual [1] - and it is starting to make sense. The book quickly goes
> goes off into extolling the use of jQuery. I am hedging that this
> learning route will be most productive as my knowledge of javascript
> and jQuery synchronize in the near future when TW becomes increasingly
> jQuery-like.
>
> While considering which javascript book to buy, I spent rather long
> time reading another book in the bookshop , Javascript ; the good
> parts[2]. I didn't buy it, but a couple of days later thought that I
> would return to get it - it was sold out; clearly not a scientific
> measure of the quality of the book. Its a thin book, and written in a
> really nice tone. My time with it, although brief, gave me an overview
> and removed some fear.
>
> [1]
http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596515898/
> [2]
http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596517748/?CMP=AFC-ak_book&ATT=JavaScr...
>
> 2009/3/5 Eris of StrongHold [STRM] <
eris...@gmail.com>: