jQuery gave a new life to JavaScript coding. Thanks to this great tool, it is now possible to build powerful and responsive web pages. In this article, I have compiled 10 jQuery snippets that will definitely help you in your daily client-side coding.
Preloading images is useful: Instead of loading an image when the user request it, we preload them in the background so they are ready to be displayed. Doing so in jQuery is very simple, as shown below:
(function($) {
var cache = [];
// Arguments are image paths relative to the current page.
$.preLoadImages = function() {
var args_len = arguments.length;
for (var i = args_len; i--;) {
var cacheImage = document.createElement('img');
cacheImage.src = arguments[i];
cache.push(cacheImage);
}
}
jQuery.preLoadImages("image1.gif", "/path/to/image2.png");
→ Source: http://engineeredweb.com/blog/09/12/preloading-images-jquery-and-javascript
The following snippet will open all links with the rel="external"
attribute in a new tab/window. The code can be easily customized to only open links with a specific class.
$('a[@rel$='external']').click(function(){
this.target = "_blank";
});
/*
Usage:
<a href="http://www.catswhocode.com" rel="external">catswhocode.com</a>
*/
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view/315/-jquery–target-blank-links/
This snippet is just a line of code, but it is one of the easiest way to detect if JavaScript is enabled on the client browser. If yes, a hasJS
class will be added to the <body>
tag.
$('body').addClass('hasJS');
→ Source: http://eisabainyo.net/weblog/2010/09/01/10-useful-jquery-snippets/
jQuery is known for its ability to let developers easily create stunning visual effects. A simple, but nice effect is smooth sliding to an anchor. The following snippet will create a smooth sliding effect when a link with the topLink
class is clicked.
$(document).ready(function() {
$("a.topLink").click(function() {
$("html, body").animate({
scrollTop: $($(this).attr("href")).offset().top + "px"
}, {
duration: 500,
easing: "swing"
});
return false;
});
});
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view.php?codeview&id=26739
Another very cool effect – which is very popular among clients – is indeed the fade in/fade out on mouseover. The code below set opacity to 100% on hover, and to 60% on mouseout.
$(document).ready(function(){
$(".thumbs img").fadeTo("slow", 0.6); // This sets the opacity of the thumbs to fade down to 60% when the page loads
$(".thumbs img").hover(function(){
$(this).fadeTo("slow", 1.0); // This should set the opacity to 100% on hover
},function(){
$(this).fadeTo("slow", 0.6); // This should set the opacity back to 60% on mouseout
});
});
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view/18606/
When building a column based website, you often want that all columns have the same height, as displayed in a good old table. This snippet calculate the height of the higher column and automatically adjust all other columns to this height.
var max_height = 0;
$("div.col").each(function(){
if ($(this).height() > max_height) { max_height = $(this).height(); }
});
$("div.col").height(max_height);
→ Source: http://web.enavu.com/tutorials/top-10-jquery-snippets-including-jquery-1-4/
HTML5 is definitely the future of client-side web development. Unfortunely, some old browsers do not even recognize new tags such as header
or section
. This code will force old browsers to recognize the new tags introduced by HTML5.
(function(){if(!/*@cc_on!@*/0)return;var e = "abbr,article,aside,audio,bb,canvas,datagrid,datalist,details,dialog,eventsource,figure,footer,header,hgroup,mark,menu,meter,nav,output,progress,section,time,video".split(','),i=e.length;while(i--){document.createElement(e[i])}})()
A better solution is to link the .js file to the <head>
part of your HTML page:
<!--[if lt IE 9]>
<script src="http://html5shim.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/html5.js"></script>
<![endif]-->
→ Source: http://remysharp.com/2009/01/07/html5-enabling-script/
Here is a simple jQuery function to check if the client browser supports a specific CSS3 property. In this example,border-radius
is the property we want to check, but of course this can be modified easily.
Note that when passing the property, you have to omit the dash to prevent syntax error. So instead of border-radius
, you have to pass “borderRadius” or “BorderRadius”.
var supports = (function() {
var div = document.createElement('div'),
vendors = 'Khtml Ms O Moz Webkit'.split(' '),
len = vendors.length;
return function(prop) {
if ( prop in div.style ) return true;
prop = prop.replace(/^[a-z]/, function(val) {
return val.toUpperCase();
});
while(len--) {
if ( vendors[len] + prop in div.style ) {
// browser supports box-shadow. Do what you need.
// Or use a bang (!) to test if the browser doesn't.
return true;
}
}
return false;
};
})();
if ( supports('textShadow') ) {
document.documentElement.className += ' textShadow';
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view/44079
Getting url parameters is pretty easy using jQuery. The following snippet will do the job!
$.urlParam = function(name){
var results = new RegExp('[\\?&]' + name + '=([^&#]*)').exec(window.location.href);
if (!results) { return 0; }
return results[1] || 0;
}
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view/26662
By default, a form can be submitted by pressing the “Enter” key. Thought, on some form, this keyboard shortcut can cause problems. Here is how you can prevent unwanted form submission by disabling the “Enter” key with jQuery.
$("#form").keypress(function(e) {
if (e.which == 13) {
return false;
}
});
→ Source: http://snipplr.com/view/10943/disable-enter-via-jquery/
转:http://www.dzone.com/links/r/10_awesome_jquery_snippets.html