jQuery.noConflict();
(function($){
$(function(){
$("#jv_amenu_side49").accordion({
initShow : "ul.current",
objClass:".jv_maccordion",
slide:1 });
}); })(jQuery); (function($){
$(function(){
$("#jv_amenu_side49").aMenuLoad({
activeItemId:1,
moduleId:49,
eventType:1
}); }); })(jQuery);
Opera Firefox Chrome - all work is good but
IE 7 and IE 9
have an error Char:4 Error: Object doesnt support this property or method Code:0 at this line: initShow : "ul.current",
i think it is UL tag but dont have an idea how to do it workable
there is a left column menu
Tough to see. You should past the HTML code that is relevant as well.
Anyway, are you sure you don't want initShow to be "li.current" or "ul .current"? Doesn't look right how you have it now, because that implies that the ul has a class of .current.
Related
I am trying to load HTML into the fancybox popup. Everything works great in every other browser but IE 8 (I haven't checked other versions of IE). The popup opens but there is nothing in it.
This is my js:
$(".fancyPopup").live('click', function(ev){
ev.preventDefault();
var selectedStrip = '#' + $(this).attr('id');
$(".fancyPopup").live('click', function(ev){
ev.preventDefault();
var selectedStrip = '#' + $(this).attr('id');
$.fancybox(
{
href: '/snapav/mkting/html/rackPowerStripSuggestions.html',
type: 'ajax',
fitToView : false,
afterShow: function(){
hideSeries();
$('.strips:not("' + selectedStrip + '")').hide('slow', function(){
$('ul' + selectedStrip).addClass('flagged');
});
}
});
});
Any help is MUCH appreciated.
This was actually 2 issues.
To get the content to fill the popup in IE, I needed to add a DOCTYPE and all that info that goes into a plain HTML page. Wasn't aware of that.
IE has a difficult time with animate. You have to have the exact property match up in your CSS that you are animating. So if in your CSS you have "padding: 4px 0", you have to break it down to "padding-top: 4px and padding-bottom: 4px" in your css, because you can't animate shorthand CSS in jQuery.
Lots learned here! Hopefully this can help someone else in the future.
I'm currently using jQuery Waypoints to highlight nav items as you scroll through sections of the page. All of that works fine; thanks to copying the code from the demo at http://imakewebthings.github.com/jquery-waypoints/.
My demo is: http://www.pandlmedia.com/index.php/index_new
However, I also want to create a waypoint at the #footer div which would trigger an event to change the color of all of the nav links.
$('#footer').bind('waypoint.reached', function(event, direction) {
$('.nav ul a').addClass('white');
});
This doesn't work, as there's nothing telling it to change back once it exits the #footer div. I'm not very experienced in writing jQuery or using this plug-in for that matter. What do I need to add to make this work? Is the fact that there are two levels of waypoints also causing problems?
well, looking closer at the "sticky elements" demo, I was able to modify the example of the disappearing '.top' button to make this work for my own needs described above:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$('.container .nav ul a').addClass('black');
$.waypoints.settings.scrollThrottle = 30;
$('#footer').waypoint(function(event, direction) {
$('.container .nav ul a').toggleClass('black', direction === "up");
}, {
offset: '50%'
});
});
The key was to add the .black class below the .white class in my css so that it overrides the color parameter properly.
I am using the jQuery TipTip plugin to display tooltips on hrefs using data from the "Title" tag.
Here is the code i am using to invoke TipTip
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.tipTip.js"></script>
<!-- ToolTip script -->
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
$(".someClass").tipTip({maxWidth: "auto", edgeOffset: 10});
});
</script>
<!-- End ToolTip script -->
and in the body
sample content. sample,stuff.
This works fine as standalone example. However, when i set the script up to load the content into the body via ajax (using sample.html that contains the original body code), the ToolTip stops working.
<script type="text/javascript">
//loading sample ajax data
$(document).ready(function(){
$('#remote').load('sample.html');
});
</script>
Browsing in the TipTip forums, someone mentioned this could work using the jQuery .live function, but having read the documentation, i dont understand how im supposed to implement this with my code. I understand that jquery-live is an event handler, so supposedly, i could call in the data via ajax as the primary event and then apply TipTip as a secondary event, but i cant figure out how to implement this, and dont know if im definitely going down the right path.
Could someone please advise me?
An easy solution would be to create a function that activates TipTip:
function activateTipTip() {
$(".someClass").tipTip({maxWidth: "auto", edgeOffset: 10});
}
$(document).ready(function(){
activateTipTip();
$('#remote').load('sample.html', function() {
activateTipTip();
});
});
Not very elegant, but should work though.
This code will make it so that any link that has a title attribute will have TipTip's functionality applied to it:
$('a[title]').live('mouseover', function()
{
$(this).tipTip({
delay: 200,
maxWidth: '400px'
});
$(this).trigger('mouseenter');
});
Source: https://drew.tenderapp.com/discussions/tiptip/73-tiptip-and-jquery-live
This is my solution for this problem:
$(ElementParent).on('mouseover', YourElementSelector, function()
{
if($(this).data('hasTipTip') !== true)
{
$(this).tipTip(TipTipOptions);
$(this).data('hasTipTip', true);
$(this).trigger('mouseover');
}
});
How can i catch the "onblur" event of my htmlbox textarea?
I want to be able to get the htmlbox content when it's onblur..
Thank's In Advance.
Try this code, it loops waiting 1 second until htmlbox creates the iframe, then it adds a .blur handler to the iframe, I found out the iframe's id by using IE8's Developer Tools, by clicking on the arrow icon in the developer tools and clicking the box you can see how HTML looks after the page loads and javascript processed. if($("iframe").length) is true then then htmlbox has created the iframe and you can attach the .blur event handler.
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
var check = function(){
if($("iframe").length){
$("#hb_html").blur(function(){
alert('Blur has occurred!');
});
} else {
setTimeout(check, 1000)
}
}
setTimeout(check, 1000)
});
</script>
This example demonstrates:
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.5.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
$("#bar").blur(function(){
$(this).text("I have been blurred.");
});
});
</script>
<textarea id='bar'>foo</textarea>
Make sure the file jquery-1.5.min.js is in the same folder IF you use the example above.
You can read up on the .blur event at http://api.jquery.com/blur/
It receives a function as an argument and executes it when it becomes blurred.
I am trying to display an ajax spinner when loading AJAX content.
The following code appears to work fine in Firefox but not in IE7. The functions to show and hide the spinner are being called but the browser just does not display it.
Here is the jQuery:
$.ajax({
url: filterorSearch,
data: {filterParams: JSON.stringify(filters), requestTime: new Date().getTime()},
beforeSend: function(){
showLoadingGraphic();
},
complete: function(){
hideLoadingGraphic();
},
success: function(data){
$("#BreakingNews").html(data);
GetRelatedarticles();
}
});
function showLoadingGraphic() {
alert("show");
var showSpinner = $('#page-placeholder-wrapper #main-left').prepend('<div id="ajaxLoader"></div>');
return showSpinner;
}
function hideLoadingGraphic() {
alert("hide");
var hideSpinner = $('#ajaxLoader').remove();
return hideSpinner;
}
And the associated CSS for the spinner:
#page-placeholder-wrapper #main-left
{
position:relative;
}
#ajaxLoader
{
background:rgba(255,255,255,.7) url("../images/icon-ajax-loading.gif") no-repeat center center;
height:100%;
left:0;
position:absolute;
top:0;
width:100%;
z-index:9999;
}
To get you working try this:
background: url("../images/icon-ajax-loading.gif") no-repeat center center rgba(255,255,255,.7);
I don't know why the rgba has to be last!
[EDIT]
IE does not support rgba, therefore with it starting on background: it errors and the rest of the line isn't executed for the css
See: Browser Support for RGBa
JQuery actually fires events when it's doing ajax.
$(document).ajaxStart(function(){
$('#ajaxIndicator').show();
}).ajaxStop(function(){
$('#ajaxIndicator').hide();
});
This will save you a lot of time over manually doing it for each individual call.
You could have a DIV relative to the top of the document which you can show/hide which overlays everything else on the page. (I forget the exact CSS which makes it always be 200px from the top of the screen, etc) update: I think it's position:fixed, although I'm not sure how well this will work in IE.
<body>
<div id="ajaxIndicator" style="position:fixed; top:200px; text-align:center">
<img src="../indicator.gif" /> Loading ...
</div>
...
Might be problems with Z sorting of your DOM elements;
IE handles Z sorting of objects in a bit different way then other browsers. Try setting z-index on your wrapper element and it should help. Generally it's a best practice if you want to save you troubles with elements positioned with relatie or absolute positioning to always give their parent proper z-index;
Having the actual page to debug would make it easier.
For the sake of my sanity and getting this done today.
I have added the "ajaxLoader" element to the markup, hidden initially with CSS and then show/hide when AJAX starts/stops.
This works fine for all browsers.
Thanks to all for their input.