Book Image

jQuery UI 1.7: The User Interface Library for jQuery

Book Image

jQuery UI 1.7: The User Interface Library for jQuery

Overview of this book

Modern web application user interface design requires rapid development and proven results. jQuery UI, a trusted suite of official plug-ins for the jQuery JavaScript library, gives you a solid platform on which to build rich and engaging interfaces with maximum compatibility and stability, and minimum time and effort. jQuery UI has a series of ready-made, great-looking user interface widgets and a comprehensive set of core interaction helpers designed to be implemented in a consistent and developer-friendly way. With all this, the amount of code that you need to write personally to take a project from conception to completion is drastically reduced. Specially revised for version 1.7 of jQuery UI, this book has been written to maximize your experience with the library by breaking down each component and walking you through examples that progressively build upon your knowledge, taking you from beginner to advanced usage in a series of easy-to-follow steps. In this book, you'll learn how each component can be initialized in a basic default implementation and then see how easy it is to customize its appearance and configure its behavior to tailor it to the requirements of your application. You'll look at the configuration options and the methods exposed by each component's API to see how these can be used to bring out the best of the library. Events play a key role in any modern web application if it is to meet the expected minimum requirements of interactivity and responsiveness, and each chapter will show you the custom events fired by the component covered and how these events can be intercepted and acted upon.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
jQuery UI 1.7
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Tab CSS framework classes


Using Firebug for Firefox (or another generic DOM explorer) we can see that a variety of class names are added to the different underlying HTML elements that the tabs widget is created from, as shown in the following screenshot:

Let's review these briefly. To the outer container <div> the following class names are added:

Class name

Purpose

ui-tabs

Allows tab-specific structural CSS to be applied.

ui-widget

Sets generic font styles that are inherited by nested elements.

ui-widget-content

Provides theme-specific styles.

ui-corner-all

Applies rounded corners to container.

The first element within the container is the <ul> element. This element receives the following class names:

Class name

Purpose

ui-tabs-nav

Allows tab-specific structural CSS to be applied.

ui-helper-reset

Neutralizes browser-specific styles applied to <ul> elements.

ui-helper-clearfix

Applies the clear-fix as this element has children that are floated.

ui-widget...