World Famous Comics: Professional iPhone and iPod touch Programming: Building Applications for Mobile Safari (Wrox Professional Guides)
Professional iPhone and iPod touch Programming: Building Applications for Mobile Safari (Wrox Professional Guides)
By: Richard Wagner Publisher: Wrox Average Rating: Binding: Paperback Label: Wrox Number of Items: 1 Number of Pages: 284 Publication Date: January 29, 2008
Product Description: The Safari-exclusive applications for iPhone and iPod touch assemble various elements, and this book shows you how to integrate these elements with key design concepts and principles in order to develop a highly usable interface for the touch screen. You’ll learn to use existing open-source libraries in your code, imitate the overall look and feel of built-in Apple applications, and migrate existing Web 2.0 apps and sites to this new mobile platform. By the end of the book, you’ll feel untouchable as you create a custom mobile application from scratch.
iPhone Development This book was a great start for something I am hoping to do on a regular basis, iPhone development.
Good Coverage of Web-Based iPhone Dev I've never owned a Mac (until now) and never done any development for that platform. While this book doesn't intend to cover the recently released iPhone SDK (it was published before the SDK's release), it does provide excellent coverage of web-based development for the iPhone (and iPod Touch). It leverages a free, open-source library to take much of the grunt work out of it, but also provides detailed code samples and examples and enough information so you could probably do it without the library should you desire. If you're interested in making your site look and feel like an iPhone app, this book will get you there. You should understand HTML, CSS and, preferably, a modicum of Javascript to get the most out of the book.
basic web app It's just a basic web app which are a combile of AJAX and CSS. Not much new.
ok but not great This book contains quite some materials from the book you can also find them in Apple's documentations. It also has quite some details on Joe Hewitt's iUI framework. But generally speaking, it lacks more detailed explanation (on CSS, AJAX, JavaScript). Here's the dilema: if you are an experienced CSS and JavaScript developer, you will find it lacking the depth. It barely scratches the surface of what real AJAX-powered iPhone applications can do. If you are somewhat a newbie developer, you will need more explanation on the subject. Unfortunately, this book falls in-between the above 2 scenarios.
After all, this is the first and only book on iPhone programming, it's a nice start for anyone that's interested.