| By Jeremy Geelan | Article Rating: |
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| March 8, 2006 09:15 AM EST | Reads: |
28,708 |
"One of the questions that comes up a lot when we’re talking about Flex with web developers is ‘How does this relate to AJAX?’" writes Ely Greenfield (pictured), a long time developer at Macromedia/now Adobe who works with a bunch of very smart engineers (his description!) to design and develop the Flex SDK. In a blog entry entitled "Flex and Ajax: So Happy Together," Greenfield says that hearing this question always brings to mind the image of a 10 year old boy throwing a cat and a chicken into a cardboard box, eyes wide at the thought of the carnage expected to follow.
"Flex is a platform for building Rich Internet Applications, and Ajax is a suite of technologies people are using more and more to build RIAs – so we must be competitors, right? My answer is always the same: Flex and Ajax are old friends."Both technologies, Greenfield writes, have their strengths, and both have their appropriate uses in the web development world.
"HTML and AJAX are great for text-heavy content — Flex and Flash are perfect for rich interaction and media."
Greenfield's "Quietly Scheming" blog will win many friends with its matter-of-fact approach. Read this for example:
"Smart developers take the time to equip themselves with as many different tools as they can, and great web apps use the right technology for the task at hand. The best sites, in my opinion, use the right tool for each individual part of the project. It’s motherhood and apple pie (something we on the Flex team affectionately refer to as ‘MotherPie’) to say that a good developer should be technology agnostic."Greenfield knows whereof he speaks. He reminds his blog readers of the existence of something devised at Adobe Labs called "FAB" - for Flex AJAX Bridge.
The Flex AJAX Bridge is, according to Greenfield, "a small, unobtrusive library of code that you can insert into a Flex application, a Flex component, a Flash movie, or even an empty SWF file to expose it to scripting via the browser. Once you’ve inserted the bridge, pretty much anything you can do from Actionscript, you can do from Javascript."
The pre-alpha version of the FABridge has been posted for download and use to Adobe labs at: http://labs.macromedia.com/wiki/index.php/Flex_Framework:FABridge.
"One thing worth pointing out," notes Greenfield, "is that the bridge has currently only been tested on IE 6 and Firefox 1 and 1.5 on windows. There’ve been reports it works fine on various macintosh browsers. That said, there’s no reason it shouldn’t work, aside from taking the time to work out the kinks."
Published March 8, 2006 Reads 28,708
Copyright © 2006 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Jeremy Geelan
Jeremy Geelan is President & COO of Cloud Expo, Inc. and Conference Chair of the worldwide Cloud Expo series. He appears regularly at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of Cloud Expo's "Power Panels" on SYS-CON.TV.
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newsight 03/08/06 09:50:34 AM EST | |||
Wow, how cool is that? FAB is a code library that makes it possible to access Flex 2 objects with JavaScript directly from Ajax applications and vice versa, but that's not all: you can create controls or even whole applications with JS in Flex 2. Fantastic! |
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Kudos 03/08/06 09:30:08 AM EST | |||
Useful to learn of this guy. Will he be speaking at SYS-CON's october RIA Conference? Sounds like the Voice of Reason incarnate, always a good characteristic for an enterprise developer! |
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