Book Image

jQuery for Designers: Beginner's Guide

By : Natalie Maclees
Book Image

jQuery for Designers: Beginner's Guide

By: Natalie Maclees

Overview of this book

jQuery is awesome for designers ñ it builds easily on the CSS and HTML you already know and allows you to create impressive effects with just a few lines of code. However, without a background in programming, JavaScript ñ on which jQuery is built ñ can feel intimidating and impossible to grasp. This book will show you how simple it can be to learn the basics and then extend your capabilities by taking advantage of jQuery plugins.jQuery for Designers offers approachable lessons for designers with little or no background in JavaScript. The book begins by introducing the jQuery library and a small and simple introduction to JavaScript. Then you'll step through a few simple tasks to get your feet wet before diving into using plugins to quickly and simply add complex effects with just a few lines of code.You'll be surprised at how far you can get with JavaScript when you start with the power of the jQuery library and this book will show you how. We'll cover common interface widgets and effects such as tabbed interfaces, custom tooltips, and custom scrollbars. You'll learn how to create an animated navigation menu and how to add simple AJAX effects to enhance your site visitors' experience. Then we'll wrap up with interactive data grids which make sorting and searching data easy.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
jQuery for Designers Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Time for action – using a custom transition


Follow these steps to change the default transition between images:

  1. For this example, we'll take a look at how to use the fade transition. Open your scripts.js file. All we have to do is pass the fade value for the transition key to the colorbox() method as follows:

    $(document).ready(function(){
           $('a[rel="ireland"]').colorbox({transition:'fade'});
    });

    Note that we've added some curly braces inside the parentheses. Inside these curly braces, we can pass in key/value pairs to customize different aspects of the Colorbox. In this case, the key is transition and the value is 'fade'.

    If you reload the page in the browser, click one of the thumbnails then click the next and previous buttons to flip through the images, you'll see that the Colorbox fades out and then back in between each image.

  2. What if we decided we'd rather get rid of the transitions altogether? We'd simply have to change the value for the transition key to 'none':

    $(document).ready(function...