Chapter 29. Bringing It All Together
Now that youâve reached the end of this book, your first milestone along the path of the hows, whys, and wherefores of dynamic web programming, I want to leave you with a real example that you can sink your teeth into. In fact, itâs a collection of examples, because Iâve put together a simple social networking project comprising all the main features youâd expect from such a site, or more to the point, such a web app.
Across the various files, there are examples of MySQL table creation and database access, CSS, file inclusion, session control, DOM access, asynchronous calls, event and error handling, file uploading, image manipulation, the HTML5 canvas, and a whole lot more.
Each example file is complete and self-contained yet works with all the others to build a fully working social networking site, even including a stylesheet you can modify to completely change the look and feel of the project. Being small and light, the end product is particularly usable on mobile platforms such as a smartphone or tablet but will run equally well on a full-size desktop computer.
And you should find that, by utilizing the power of both jQuery and jQuery Mobile, the code runs fast, is easy to use, adapts itself well to all environments, and looks good. As an exercise, you may wish to adapt the code further, perhaps including utilizing React in some way.
That said, I have tried to keep this code as slimmed-down as possible to keep it easy to follow. ...
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