Building the Ajax Component / Pop-Up Calendar / Made in China - WebReference Update
WebReference Update: September 10, 2007
New this week on WebReference.com and the Web:
FEATURE: Ajax Components - Part 3: Building the ComponentOTHER VOICES:
- Selecting Dates via a Pop-Up Calendar
- What's New in SQL 2008 -Â Part 2
- .NET Tip: Debugging: Dynamically Determining the Name of the Current Function
- Web 2.0's Higher Standard
- Flaw Still Shadows Firefox
- Made in China: Virus-Laden Web Pages
FEATURE: Ajax Components - Part 3: Building the Component
In the last part of this series, you'll learn how to build a declarative component for an application with a list of customers which is populated from a server-side data handler using Ajax.
[ Read the entire article ]
OTHER VOICES
- Selecting Dates via a Pop-Up Calendar
This visitor submission displays a calendar in a pop up window so a user can choose a date. Once that date is picked, the calendar returns that value to the parent form.
ASP 101 - What's New in SQL 2008 -Â Part 2
Don Schlichting highlight some of the new features and benefits found in SQL Server 2008. Covered in Part 2 of this series is Development changes, new Business Intelligence features, Integration additions, and new Data Types.
Database Journal - .NET Tip: Debugging: Dynamically Determining the Name of the Current Function
Are you tired of hard-coding function names in trace messages? Have you ever used cut and paste to copy a trace statement and forgot to change the function name? There'll be no more wild goose chases because of bad function names when you determine the function name dynamically.
Developer.com
NET NEWS
- Web 2.0's Higher Standard
For enterprise adoption, the new generation of Web apps needs to be a lot better than business as usual.
internetnews, September 10, 2007 - Flaw Still Shadows Firefox
Already fixed twice by Mozilla, security researchers claim the open source browser is still vulnerable.
internetnews, September 6, 2007 - Made in China: Virus-Laden Web Pages
Because China lags behind the West in security smarts, the bad guys find Chinese sites easier to compromise.
internetnews, September 5, 2007
That's it for this . I'll have more for you next time.
Lee Underwood
Newsletter Editor, WebReference.com
lunderwood(at)jupitermedia.com
Created: September 10, 2007
URL: http://www.webreference.com/new/070910.html

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