Shopping Resources
In Association w/ Amazon Shopping
Thursday, August 07th 2008


Shopping Resources
Shopping Books
Shopping Magazines
Shopping Video
Shopping Related
outlet shopping
shopping center mall
discount shopping
shopping mall
retail shopping
shopping cart
shopping center
home shopping network
christmas shopping
home shopping
clothes shopping
comparison shopping
car shopping
catalog shopping
computer shopping
online grocery shopping
internet shopping
fitness shopping
shopping store
grocery shopping
tv shopping

Other Shopping Sites
Retailers Discount
More Shopping Sites


Constructing Usable Shopping Carts

Constructing Usable Shopping Carts
List Price: $34.99
IdealReferences.biz Price: $23.20
Your Savings: $ 11.79 ( 34% )
Subject To Change Without Notice
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: friends of ED
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005
EAN: 9781590594087
ISBN: 1590594088
Label: friends of ED
Manufacturer: friends of ED
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 352
Publication Date: 2004-04-01
Publisher: friends of ED
Studio: friends of ED

Accessories
SVG Programming: The Graphical Web
Enabling Semantic Web Services: The Web Service Modeling Ontology
Semantic Web: Concepts, Technologies and Applications (NASA Monographs in Systems and Software Engineering)

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

Creating a usable e-commerce application is a daunting challenge. There is so much to do, from the initial concept, through to designing and coding the application. This leaves a lot of scope for things to go wrong. In this book, we take all the hassle out of online shopping applications, by showing you how to plan your application, design the user interface and data store, and code the entire thing. But it doesnt stop there &emdash; we provide the full code for two complete shopping cart applications, customizable for your own needs.

What you'll learn:

  • Planning and designing an entire e-commerce application
  • Implementing the product catalog, shopping cart, and checkout system
  • Making your web application secure
This book is for any web professional who wants to implement a shopping site, or add e-commerce functionality to an existing site. HTML knowledge, as well as knowledge of one of the backend combinations (ASP/SQL Server or PHP/MySQL) is essential to get the most use out of this book.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: a full treatment of an e-commerce application
Comment: The authors set forth an ambitious goal. In one book, they try to show you how to design and code a full e-commerce application. From laying out the user interface and connecting its interactions with a server running a relational database. For the latter, they spend some time with an extended example that involves constructing a set of interrelated tables, with primary and foreign keys.

Those of you already familiar with RDB and the various normal forms will be very comfortable here. For the actual database, they illustrate with Microsoft SQL and the free MySQL. The code to connect is given in fair detail. Quite aside from anything else, the differences and similarities between these databases can be very useful. You can see the pros and cons of going with either. Heck, if you are searching for a book that compares these 2 common and important databases, this book is a good choice.

The book is a little curious in one way. The authors are clearly skilled, but they don't seem to use the formal Model-View-Controller (MVC) approach. Though you might see that the various pieces and interconnections they give can amount to this. Nor do they explicitly use the idea of an n-tier architecture. Perhaps they chose to omit these ideas to simplify the narrative. Since if you successfully use their ideas to build your application, the MVC and n-tier ideas can then have far more substance to you, when you later encounter them.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A full treatment of an e-commerce application
Comment: The authors set forth an ambitious goal. In one book, they try to show you how to design and code a full e-commerce application. From laying out the user interface and connecting its interactions with a server running a relational database. For the latter, they spend some time with an extended example that involves constructing a set of interrelated tables, with primary and foreign keys. Those of you already familiar with RDB and the various normal forms will be very comfortable here.

For the actual database, they illustrate with Microsoft SQL and the free MySQL. The code to connect is given in fair detail. Quite aside from anything else, the differences and similarities between these databases can be very useful. You can see the pros and cons of going with either. Heck, if you are searching for a book that compares these 2 common and important databases, this book is a good choice.

The book is a little curious in one way. The authors are clearly skilled, but they don't seem to use the formal Model-View-Controller (MVC) approach. Though you might see that the various pieces and interconnections they give can amount to this. Nor do they explicitly use the idea of an n-tier architecture. Perhaps they chose to omit these ideas to simplify the narrative. Since if you successfully use their ideas to build your application, the MVC and n-tier ideas can then have far more substance to you, when you later encounter them.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Practical oriented and well-focused
Comment: Once again glasshaus delivered a practical oriented and well-focused book. The authors don't waste time, straight to the meat; the book is actually full of well-explained code listings. The sample applications use ASP/SQL server and PHP/MySQL, but a lot of material is still relevant for other technologies, especially the coverage of database design, but also usability, interfaces and workflow
BTW The book is actually 300+ pages long


Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Copyright © 2005-2006 Shopping Resources. All rights reserved.

Shopping Resources
Maintained by: Marketer Solutions | Link Building