Learning Progressive Web Apps
$39.99
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Description
- Use JavaScript and modern Web APIs to build apps that are responsive, secure, self-updating, searchable, shareable, and maintainable
- Start with a simple app and progressively enhance it with powerful modern capabilities
- Discover how Service Workers can improve user experience and performance simply and painlessly
- Full source code available on GitHub, with additional insights and support at pwalearn.com
- Chapter 1: Introducing Progressive Web Apps
- Chapter 2: Web App Manifest Files
- Chapter 3: Service Workers
- Chapter 4: Resource Caching
- Chapter 5: Going the Rest of the Way Offline with Background Sync
- Chapter 6: Push Notifications
- Chapter 7: Passing Data Between Service Workers and Web Applications
- Chapter 8: Assessment, Automation, and Deployment
- Chapter 9: Automating Service Workers with Google Workbox
Use Service Workers to Turbocharge Your Web Apps
“You have made an excellent decision in picking up this book. If I was just starting on my learning path to mastery of Progressive Web Apps, there are not many folks I would trust more to get me there than John.”
—Simon MacDonald, Developer Advocate, AdobeSoftware developers have two options for the apps they build: native apps targeting a specific device or web apps that run on any device. Building native apps is challenging, especially when your app targets multiple system types—i.e., desktop computers, smartphones, televisions—because user experience varies dramatically across devices.
Service Workers—a relatively new technology—make it easier for web apps to bridge the gap between native and web capabilities. In Learning Progressive Web Apps, author John M. Wargo demonstrates how to use Service Workers to enhance the capabilities of a web app to create Progressive Web Apps (PWA). He focuses on the technologies that enable PWAs and how to use those technologies to enhance your web apps to deliver a more native-like experience.
- Build web apps a user can easily install on their local system and that work offline or on low-quality networks
- Utilize caching strategies that give you control over which app resources are cached and when
- Deliver background processing in a web application
- Implement push notifications that enable an app to easily engage with users or trigger action from a remote server
Throughout the book, Wargo introduces each core concept and illustrates the implementation of each capability through several complete, operational examples. You’ll start with simple web apps, then incrementally expand and extend them with state-of-the-art features. All example source code is available on GitHub, and additional resources are available on the author’s companion site, learningpwa.com.
Register your book for convenient access to downloads, updates, and/or corrections as they become available. See inside book for details.
- Use JavaScript and modern Web APIs to build apps that are responsive, secure, self-updating, searchable, shareable, and maintainable
- Start with a simple app and progressively enhance it with powerful modern capabilities
- Discover how Service Workers can improve user experience and performance simply and painlessly
- Full source code available on GitHub, with additional insights and support at pwalearn.com
- Use JavaScript and modern Web APIs to build apps that are responsive, secure, self-updating, searchable, shareable, and maintainable
- Start with a simple app and progressively enhance it with powerful modern capabilities
- Discover how Service Workers can improve user experience and performance simply and painlessly
- Full source code available on GitHub, with additional insights and support at pwalearn.com
progressive web apps; pwa; service workers; service worker update; w3c manifests; cross-platform web apps; modern mobile development; mobile app development; push notifications; pwa guide; learning pwa; pwa book; pwa development; pwa training; mobile ux
Software developers have two options for the apps they build: native apps targeting a specific device or web apps that run on any device. Building native apps is challenging, especially when your app targets multiple system types—i.e., desktop computers, smartphones, televisions—because user experience varies dramatically across devices.
Service Workers—a relatively new technology—make it easier for web apps to bridge the gap between native and web capabilities. In Learning Progressive Web Apps, author John M. Wargo demonstrates how to use Service Workers to enhance the capabilities of a web app to create Progressive Web Apps (PWA). He focuses on the technologies that enable PWAs and how to use those technologies to enhance your web apps to deliver a more native-like experience.
- Build web apps a user can easily install on their local system and that work offline or on low-quality networks
- Utilise caching strategies that give you control over which app resources are cached and when
- Deliver background processing in a web application
- Implement push notifications that enable an app to easily engage with users or trigger action from a remote server
John M. Wargo is a product manager, software developer, writer, presenter, father, husband, and geek. He spent more than 30 years working as a professional software developer, first as a hobbyist, then in enterprise software, and finally, for the last 15 years, in mobile development. He is the author of six books on mobile development and was a long-time contributor to the open-source Apache Cordova project. By day, he’s a principal program manager on the App + Cloud Experiences team at Microsoft. His website is johnwargo.com.
Additional information
Dimensions | 0.70 × 6.90 × 9.05 in |
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Subjects | service worker update, mobile ux, pwa training, pwa book, learning pwa, pwa guide, push notifications, mobile app development, modern mobile development, cross-platform web apps, w3c manifests, professional, service workers, pwa, pwa development, progressive web apps, COM051460, Y-AA AW PROF – PROG LANGUAGES, IT Professional, Employability, COM060160, higher education |