blogs.msdn.com— At some time in your life and that time may be soon, you will need to use javascript to interact with webservices. This tutorial gives a good primer.
Apr 7, 2008View in Crawl 4
Not that I agree with him, but when working with products from one producer (Microsoft), there is a level of support and confidence in that the products -will- work with each other.
The submitters article is not for .NET only. It is using a MS javascript library, which can be used by any scripting language.Only the tag is for .NET.
lichme5000Apr 8, 2008
<picard>agreed</picard>
cresswgaApr 8, 2008
I would digg you up but there was a problem completing my request.
davxApr 9, 2008
Not that I agree with him, but when working with products from one producer (Microsoft), there is a level of support and confidence in that the products -will- work with each other.
jasonsalasApr 9, 2008
well done, Kirk! :-)
emeshurisApr 15, 2008
The submitters article is not for .NET only. It is using a MS javascript library, which can be used by any scripting language.Only the tag is for .NET.
emeshurisApr 15, 2008
Fellas! Since when did using a library written in javascript by MS mean that it can only be used by .Net.