On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Rey Bango wrote:
> I refer back to EasyDOM that, at the moment, will only work on v1.0a.
> The upgrade to v1.0.1 broke the functionality. Further, I recall an
> email that I sent out early this month that referred to the set()
> method, which is used in EasyDOM, to which John
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Yehuda Katz wrote:
> Good fyi. I'd quibble about the front-page of the programming section.
> I'm sure there are *some* people that check sections of interest to
> them. May not be a whole lot of people, but there are certainly *some.*
> Am I missing something?
I get the p
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Michael Geary wrote:
>> Is it permissable to have more than one
>> $(document).ready(function() {})
>> per page?
>
> Yes, as many as you want. They will be called in the same order that the
> $(document).ready() calls were made.
If it gets called at all.
Am I the only one he
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Matt Stith wrote:
>
> On 9/25/06, Dave Benjamin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Am I the only one here that finds $(document).ready() to be completely
>> unreliable? IE seems to be the main culprit. If I don't put the
>> $(document)
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Brandon Aaron wrote:
> The current revision in SVN is 346. A quick glance over the check-ins
> didn't show a particular reversion # that the issue you are having was
> fixed in. I have been using the latest SVN revision since around 289
> and haven't seen this issue.
I can't
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006, Brandon Aaron wrote:
> I don't see the 'more' in IE but I do in Safari and Firefox. I noticed
> that in Firebug the console.log statment seems to get called twice but
> I could only find it once in all the javascript loaded for the home
> page. Does firebug double log or is th
Well, I removed some code that was creating the Flash-based MP3 player and
the erratic behavior on IE went away. The other site that I had this
problem with had Flash as well, and in both sites I was using the
SWFObject JavaScript library according to the instructions, by creating a
DIV to rece
On Wed, 27 Sep 2006, Paul Bakaus wrote:
> as you may know, the jQuery website is going to be updated soon,
> supported by a famous cms. Maybe it would be good to build in a plugins
> platform into the page, where every developer can add his plugin, like
> for example Firefox Plugins, mozdev. et
On Tue, 3 Oct 2006, Michael Geary wrote:
> No need to go to the extra work. jquery.js begins with this:
>
> window.undefined = window.undefined;
>
> So "undefined" exists in every browser. This is a handy line of code to put
> in any JavaScript - it's completely compatible with both old and new
>
Is there any plan to add jQuery methods to retrieve and set the
coordinates of an element on the page? It seems like a good addition to
dimensions.js, perhaps. Here's what I currently use:
$.fn.x = function(n) {
var result = null;
this.each(function() {
var o = this;
On Tue, 3 Oct 2006, Brandon Aaron wrote:
> jQuery has two methods named .top() and .left() for setting the top
> and left offset via css. I just wrote a plugin for getting the offset
> of an element and did some pretty extensive cross-browser testing.
I'm not too crazy about .top() and .left() be
On Tue, 3 Oct 2006, Brandon Aaron wrote:
> On 10/3/06, Dave Benjamin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I'm not too crazy about .top() and .left() because of the need to
>> concatenate and un-concatenate 'px' everywhere.
>
> I can understand this and it is s
7;s not kidding, however, when he says "It cannot be easily fixed because
the whole advertising infrastructure depends on the hole.". This includes
Google. =)
--
.. Dave Benjamin - Software Developer - ramenlabs.com
.. AIM: ramenlabs / MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__
On Mon, 16 Oct 2006, Aaron Heimlich wrote:
> On 10/16/06, Blair McKenzie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> $("#div")[call]()
>
> Blair's right.
>
> $("#div").call()
>
> tries to call the "call" method on $, but since there is no "call" method
> (that I know of), it's not working.
Actually, there
On Mon, 16 Oct 2006, Michael Geary wrote:
> The return value from $() isn't a function and doesn't have a call method.
>
> In any case, Blair's code is the way to do it:
>
> $("#div")[call]();
Right - I should have been more clear. To use call/apply, you'd have to do
it like this:
var obj = $('
ont = parseInt(cont) + 5
The input value is a string. To ensure that it is treated like a number,
you have to convert it before you use the + operator, since + is
overloaded for numbers and strings.
--
.. Dave Benjamin - Software Developer - ramenlabs.c
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, John Resig wrote:
> I've been busy the past couple nights working on the new
> documentation. You can see it being generated on the fly here (this is
> also in SVN, rev 172 - look in the docs folder):
> http://john.jquery.com/jquery/docs/
Very nice, John.
I have a couple of s
If you put an overflow-y: scroll on the body, it'll keep the page from
jumping around when the scrollbar appears. This works in recent versions
of FireFox, though it started out as an IE-only extension.
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discuss@jquery.com
http:/
On Thu, 10 Aug 2006, Franklin Davenport wrote:
> It would be nice if there was a JQuery Plugin for handling Styles. I
> found a script that is made to change styles (such as to stylesheets).
>
> Here it is:http://developer.apple.com/internet/webcontent/styles.html
jQuery does style changes alrea
On Sat, 26 Aug 2006, John Resig wrote:
> I'd like to thank everyone who made this release possible. It's been a
> lot of work, but the journey is only just beginning. I can't wait to
> delve into some of the very exciting advances that we have planned.
> Happy Coding!
Thank *you*, John! Congrats
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006, Stefan Petre wrote:
> Great news. I can finally release the Interface with the new changes,
> website and plugins.
Hi Stefan,
I'm trying out your new Sortables demo:
http://interface.eyecon.ro/demos/sort.html
If you make your browser window smaller than the content and scro
On Sat, 2 Sep 2006, John Resig wrote:
> Neil Mix has released a library that lets you write Javascript code just
> like that: http://www.neilmix.com/narrativejs/doc/index.html
Wow, that is really impressive. I've been thinking about different ways to
approach the sync vs. async barrier. One app
On Sat, 2 Sep 2006, John Resig wrote:
>> Lately I've been experimenting with Parenscript, which is a
>> Lisp-to-JavaScript translator that allows you to write macros; if
>> anyone's interested I can post some sequencing macro code I've been
>> working on...
>
> Go ahead! I'm interested :-)
Rig
On Sun, 3 Sep 2006, Arash Yalpani wrote:
> And I have found another error on Firefox/Mac:
>
>
> Error: missing name after . operator
>
> In isortables.js on line 92:
>
>shs.float = 'none';
>
"float" is a reserved word in JavaScript. Th
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