Have you considered using $.ajax in combination with ASP.NET WebMethods? It's hard to suggest a more concrete solution to this problem without understanding how your JavaScript/jQuery would consume/process the resources. I assume that they're organized into logical groups (or could be) where you could return several resource strings that belong on a single page.
Assuming that, you could write a very simple C# class -- or use a Dictionary<string, string> -- to return data from your ASP.NET WebMethod. The results would look something like:
[WebMethod]
public Dictionary<string, string> GetPageResources(string currentPage)
{
// ... Organizational stuff goes here.
}
I always separate out my AJAX calls into separate .js files/objects; that would look like:
function GetPageResources (page, callback)
$.ajax({ // Setup the AJAX call to your WebMethod
data: "{ 'currentPage':'" + page + "' }",
url: /Ajax/Resources.asmx/GetPageResources, // Or similar.
success: function (result) { // To be replaced with .done in jQuery 1.8
callback(result.d);
}
});
Then, in the .js executed on the page, you should be able to consume that data like:
// Whatever first executes when you load a page and its JS files
// -- I assume that you aren't using something like $(document).ready(function () {});
GetPageResources(document.location, SetPageResources);
function SetPageResources(resources) {
for (currentResource in resources) {
$("#" + currentResource.Key).html(currentResource.Value);
}
}