If you're planning to do intensive AJAX tasks, such adding new records, edit them on the fly, etc., then I suggest you to load an empty page, that calls an script that returns an array of dictionaries by JSON, and then using the Template (beta) system implemented in jQuery recently, or implement one yourself, having a hidden element, with spans/divs/tds tagged with classes, and cloning and filling it each time a new record arrives.
On the other hand, if you're going to keep this static, just use HTML.
This is how I manage templating. This is an efficient way because the DOM elements does exists in the DOM tree, and cloning is less expensive than parsing an string that contains the elements.
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$contactTemplate = $("#contact_template")
function makeContactElement(data) {
var $newElem = $contactTemplate.clone(true)
$newElem.attr("data-id", data.id)
$newElem.find(".name").text( data.firstName + " " + data.lastName )
for(var i in data.info) {
$newElem.find(".info").append( makeInfoElement(data.info[i]) )
}
return $newElem
}
$infoTemplate = $("#info_template")
function makeInfoElement(data) {
var $newElem = $infoTemplate.clone(true)
$newElem.find("infoLabel").text(info.label)
$newElem.find("infoPiece").text(info.piece)
return $newElem
}
$.getJSON('/foo.bar', null, function(data) {
for(var i in data) {
$("#container").append( makeInfoElement(data[i]) )
}
})
})
</script>
<style type="text/css">
.template { display: none; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="container">
</div>
<!-- Hidden elements -->
<div id="contact_template" class="contact template">
<a rel="123" class="name"></a>
<div class="info"></div>
</div>
<div id="info_template" class="template">
<div class="infoLabel"></div>
<div class="infoPiece"></div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Then, when you create a new record, just fill a data object with the information, and you'll sure that all the element flow will be generic.
Using .clone(true)
opens the door to make generic events instead of binding a live event, which is more expensive.
For example, if you want to make a button to delete a record:
<script ...>
...
$("#contact_template .delete").click(function() {
var id = $(this).parents("contact").attr("data-id")
$.post('/foo.bar', { action: delete, id: id }, function() { ... })
return false
})
</script>
...
<div id="contact_template" class="contact template">
<a href="#" class="delete">Delete</a>
</div>
Good luck!