Avgrund is a jQuery plugin for modal boxes and popups. It uses interesting concept showing depth between popup and page. It works in all modern browsers and gracefully degrade in those that do not support CSS3 transitions and transformations.
This plugin replaces the default check boxes and radio inputs for better looking ones. Features: Compatible with IE7+, Chrome, Firefox, Safari and mobile browsers; Custom design, kindly provided by Bruno O. Barros.
You are free to use the slideControl.js plugin however you want. Some Options: speed: Controls the speed of the animation for a slider resizing, defaults to 400 lower Bound, Sets the minimum amount the slider can be set to, defaults to 1.
I initially wanted to have only one div to cover the entire document and to play with the video iframe z-index. Unfortunately I encountered several problems with some players. It worked with YouTube, but not with Daily motion, etc. I therefore decided to make a new script.
In this tutorial we are using jQuery and the new transformation features brought by CSS3 to create a three dimensional dynamic slider effect. The techniques presented here- for creating sliders, and CSS dynamic resizable bars, can be used together or in part for powering all sorts of jQuery goodness.
Today we are making an AJAX-enabled Sticky Note management system. It will give visitors the ability to create notes with a live preview, and move them around on the screen. Every movement is going to be sent to the back-end via AJAX and saved in the database.
Complexify aims to provide a good measure of password complexity for websites to use both for giving hints to users in the form of strength bars, and for casually enforcing a minimum complexity for security reasons.
One of the most used, but under featured HTML controls, is the humble TEXTAREA control. This control is designed to accept large blocks of text from the user. A wide variety of plugins exist for the TEXTAREA that layer it with toolbars, auto-resizing, rich-text editing and the works.
Image Area Select is a jQuery plugin for selecting a rectangular area of an image. It allows web developers to easily implement image cropping functionality, as well as other user interface features, such as photo notes (like those on Flickr).
It\'s flexible in many ways, in that the small, large, and zoom areas are all pretty easy to customize (via CSS). It\'s inflexible in other ways, in that it doesn\'t automatically work by cloning content or anything like that (which is arguably more flexible), and the HTML structure is fairly