Hi
Here's another one I'm working on
http://www.southolidays.com/
Still some work to do.
There is a modal box made with prototype, but the biggest job is done
on the calendars (see a rental detail example : http://
www.southolidays.com/en/calendarview/SL0157 ) thanks to jQuery,
interface, blockUI, ajaxForm.
Le 19 avr. 07 à 22:27, Theo Welch a écrit :
Thanks, John!
And thank *you* for making it possible! Seriously. Without jQuery,
that exhibit would not exist. Thanks a lot!
-THEO-
On Apr 19, 2007, at 3:24 PM, John Resig wrote:
Very very nice work!
--John
On 4/19/07, Theo Welch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi All,
I just completed a Photography exhibit that is within the U.S.
National Archives' website. It uses jQuery extensively and has some
pretty good photos in it too. :)
http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/twww/
It uses a modified Accordion plugin for the main presentation, a
modified Thickbox to display the photos, that little Pause plugin,
and a few other bits of jQuery goodness. I left the JS code non-
obfuscated in case anyone wants to see how I glued it together.
I have also implemented the jQuery library on the U.S. National
Archives' website (the entire site). It replaces some hand-coded JS
and the (now ancient) Moock Flash Detection API they were using:
http://www.archives.gov/
Archives.gov isn't actually using jQuery all that much yet. Mostly
it's just the basics, and the jMedia plugin here and there. In time
I'll be adding more client-side functionality for the staff there to
utilize (I'm a consultant/contractor, not a Gov. Employee), starting
with the tabs, form, and validation plugins.
Thanks to the whole jQuery community for all these new opportunities
to impress my clients!
Cheers!
-THEO-