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Progressive Web Application Development by Example

You're reading from   Progressive Web Application Development by Example Develop fast, reliable, and engaging user experiences for the web

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125421
Length 354 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Chris Love Chris Love
Author Profile Icon Chris Love
Chris Love
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Progressive Web Apps FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating a Home Screen Experience with a Web Manifest 3. Making Your Website Secure 4. Service Workers – Notification, Synchronization, and Our Podcast App 5. The Service Worker Life Cycle 6. Mastering the Cache API - Managing Web Assets in a Podcast Application 7. Service Worker Caching Patterns 8. Applying Advanced Service Worker Cache Strategies 9. Optimizing for Performance 10. Service Worker Tools 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

The Fetch API

Way back in 1996, Internet Explorer introduced the iframe element as a way to load web content asynchronously in a web page. Over the next two years, the concept evolved into the first implementation of what we now know as the XMLHttpReqest object.

Back then, it was known as XMLHTTP and was first shipped in Internet Explorer 5.0. Soon after, Mozilla, Safari, and Opera all shipped implementations of what we now call XMLHttpRequest.

Up to this point, web pages were static and required an entire reload when a user navigated from one page to another inside the same site.

In 2004, Google started making wide use of what we now call AJAX in Gmail and Google Maps. They showed us how to leverage in-browser requests to the server and how to manipulate the DOM in response to the server's payload. This is typically done by calling an API that returns JSON data.

As with...

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