Book Image

HTML5 Web Application Development By Example : Beginner's guide

By : Jody Gustafson
Book Image

HTML5 Web Application Development By Example : Beginner's guide

By: Jody Gustafson

Overview of this book

HTML5's new features have made it a real application development platform with widespread adoption throughout the industry for this purpose. Being able to create one application that can run on virtually any device from phone to desktop has made it the first choice among developers. Although JavaScript has been around for a while now, it wasn't until the introduction of HTML5 that we have been able to create dynamic, feature-rich applications rivaling those written for the desktop. HTML5 Web Application Development By Example will give you the knowledge you need to build rich, interactive web applications from the ground up, incorporating the most popular HTML5 and CSS3 features available right now. This book is full of tips, tools, and example applications that will get you started writing your own applications today. HTML5 Web Application Development By Example shows you how to write web applications using the most popular HTML5 and CSS3 features. This book is a practical, hands-on guide with numerous real-world and relevant examples. You will learn how to use local storage to save an application's state and incorporate CSS3 to make it look great. You will also learn how to use custom data attributes to implement data binding. We'll use the new Canvas API to create a drawing application, then use the Audio API to create a virtual piano, before turning it all into a game. The time to start using HTML5 is now. And HTML5 Web Application Development by Example will give you the tips and know-how to get started.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
HTML5 Web Application Development By Example Beginner's guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


There you have it. We now have our first HTML5 application under our belts. A tasklist where we can add, remove, and edit tasks. The tasks are persisted, so that when the user returns to the application they can continue from where they left off. We covered the following concepts in this chapter:

  • We learned the basics of building an HTML5 application and its three components, HTML, CSS, and JS

  • We created an application template to help us get new applications started quickly

  • We learned how to use jQuery to access and manipulate the DOM

  • We learned how to initialize a web application and handle user interaction

  • We learned how to create HTML templates so we can define reusable element structures in markup

  • We learned how to use Web Storage to save and retrieve the state of an application, and created an AppStorage object to help us access localStorage

Now that we've learned the basics of creating HTML5 applications and have our tasklist application working, we're ready to do some styling. In the next chapter, we will learn about some of the new CSS3 features that will make our application look as good, or better than, any desktop app.