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CSS has grown from a language for formatting documents into a robust language for designing web applications. Its syntax is easy to learn, making CSS a great entry point for those new to programming. Indeed, it's often the second language that developers learn, right behind HTML. One of CSS's new features is the Grid Layout Module, which enables complex layout designs that previously would have been very difficult to achieve. In this book, we'll examine five projects that use grid layout. It contains: Redesigning a Site to Use CSS Grid Layout by Ilya Bodrov Redesigning a Card-based Tumblr Layout with CSS Grid by Giulio Mainardi Easy and Responsive Modern CSS Grid Layout by Ahmed Bouchefra Progressively Enhanced CSS Layouts from Floats to Flexbox to Grid by Diogo Souza Make Forms Great with CSS Grid by Craig Buckler This book is suitable for developers with some CSS experience.
Web sites --- Cascading style sheets. --- Design.
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Despite working on the web every day, few developers have a good word to say about the monster they've created. Achingly slow sites with annoying overlays, cookie agreements, instant notifications, and obtrusive ads litter the web landscape. While there may be some excuses for complex web applications, there's little justification for sluggish content-based and ecommerce sites. People are notoriously impatient, and an unresponsive site receives fewer visitors and conversions. This practical, short book provides advice, tips, and best practice for improving website performance, ranging from quick, five-minute configuration changes to major website overhauls. We primarily concentrate on front-end activities and server configurations to optimize the code delivered to a browser. Some back-end tips are provided, but this is often specific to your application, framework, database, and usage patterns. Server-side performance can often be improved with additional or more powerful computing resources. Ideally, everyone involved in a project would consider performance from the start. Somewhat understandably, that rarely occurs, because no one can appreciate the speed of a website or application before it's been created. Many of the tips contained in this book can therefore be applied after your project has been delivered.
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Node.js: Novice to Ninja is your hands-on guide to learning everything needed to build a professional web application using Node.js, the hugely popular open-source, cross-platform, back-end JavaScript runtime environment. You'll start off by getting familiar with the basics - installation and building your first apps - before moving onto more advanced concepts, including debugging, asynchronous programming, using Express.js, working with databases, deployment, and more. You'll finish by building a complete multi-player real-time quiz application.
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There's no doubt that the JavaScript ecosystem changes fast. Not only are new tools and frameworks introduced and developed at a rapid rate, the language itself has undergone big changes with the introduction of ES2015 (aka ES6). Understandably, many articles have been written complaining about how difficult it is to learn modern JavaScript development these days. We're aiming to minimize that confusion with this set of books on modern JavaScript. This book presents modern JavaScript best practice, utilizing the features now available in the language that enable you to write more powerful code that is clean, performant, maintainable, and resusable. It contains: The Anatomy of a Modern JavaScript Application by James Kolce Clean Code with ES6 Default Parameters & Property Shorthands by Moritz Kruger JavaScript Performance Optimization Tips: An Overview by Ivan CuriC JavaScript Design Patterns: The Singleton by Samier Saeed JavaScript Object Creation: Patterns and Best Practices by Jeff Mott Best Practices for Using Modern JavaScript Syntax by M. David Green Flow Control in Modern JS: Callbacks to Promises to Async/Await by Craig Buckler JavaScript's New Private Class Fields, and How to Use Them by Craig Buckler This book is for all front-end developers who wish to improve their JavaScript skills. You'll need to be familiar with HTML and CSS and have a reasonable level of understanding of JavaScript in order to follow the discussion.
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