The examples on jqModal webpage seem to fit almost everything I want
to do... However, I took a look at http://trentrichardson.com/Impromptu/
and what I liked about it that I didn't find in jqModal (maybe I'm
blind) is those neat effects when showing/hiding the dialog and the
possibility to configure a few dialog buttons like ok/cancel, yes/no
and stuff like that.

I will need those 2 types of prompts and for them both, jqModal seems
to fit better but it doesn't have the option (that I could find) to
say which dialog buttons I want my dialog to have...

On Feb 15, 9:56 am, "Alexandre Plennevaux" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> jqModal is definitely the most flexible, but maybe not the easiest for
> a non developer or if you are wanting to do things different than the
> demos examples.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 4:41 AM, Sean O <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >  I switch between jqModal and Thickbox 3.1 for different apps, slightly
> >  different needs.  Thickbox works well for forms, looks nice, while jqModal
> >  is much snappier.
>
> >  SEAN O
> >  _____________
> >  http://www.sean-o.com
>
> >  Nazgulled wrote:
>
> >  > Hi,
> >  > There are so many plugins for modal dialogs that I don't know which
> >  > one should I use and/or which one is the best... I mean, if there was
> >  > only one plugin of this type including all the features from all the
> >  > modal plugins, that would be cool.
>
> >  > Which one do you think it's the best and why? Care to state the pros
> >  > and cons of each plugin (or the ones you know/have already tested)?
> >  > That would be nice...
>
> >  --
> >  View this message in 
> > context:http://www.nabble.com/Best-plugin-for-modal-dialogs-tp15493135s27240p...
> >  Sent from the jQuery General Discussion mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
> --
> Alexandre Plennevaux
> LAb[au]
>
> http://www.lab-au.com

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