Book Image

jQuery UI 1.10: The User Interface Library for jQuery - Fourth Edition

Book Image

jQuery UI 1.10: The User Interface Library for jQuery - Fourth Edition

Overview of this book

jQuery UI, the official UI widget library for jQuery, gives you a solid platform on which to build rich and engaging interfaces quickly, with maximum compatibility, stability, and effort. jQuery UI's ready-made widgets help to reduce the amount of code that you need to write to take a project from conception to completion. jQuery UI 1.10: The User Interface Library for jQuery has been specially revised for Version 1.10 of jQuery UI. It is written to maximize your experience with the library by breaking down each component and walking you through examples that progressively build up your knowledge, taking you from beginner to advanced user in a series of easy-to-follow steps. Throughout the book, you'll learn how to create a basic implementation of each component, then customize and configure the components to tailor them to your application. Each chapter will also show you the custom events fired by the components covered and how these events can be intercepted and acted upon to bring out the best of the library. We will then go on to cover the use of visually engaging, highly configurable user interface widgets. At the end of this book, we'll look at the functioning of all of the UI effects available in the jQuery UI library.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
jQuery UI 1.10: The User Interface Library for jQuery
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Displaying certain tooltips


So far, we've assigned all of our tooltips to work using the $(document) object; whilst this will work perfectly well, it does mean that our tooltips will always follow the same format, and work in the same manner, as the configuration will apply to all tooltips on that page.

We can easily change this, though; jQuery UI's Tooltip will work equally fine with any jQuery selectors, as it does with the document object. To prove this, let's take a look at how you would configure tooltip to work with a specific element.

In tooltip2.html, change the final <script> element to the following:

<script>
  $(document).ready(function($){
    $("#input").tooltip();
  });  
</script>        

We don't need the CSS override styles, so remove this line from the <head> of the document:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/tooltipOverride.css">

We also need to add the following code below the existing markup:

<p>Tooltips are also useful for form elements,...