FBJS-Like test console
FBJS really did the right simple thing to put JavaScript into sandbox, and here’s my raw prototype:
Keep It Simple, Stupid
FBJS really did the right simple thing to put JavaScript into sandbox, and here’s my raw prototype:
I did this for my co-worker, though it’s a rarely used function.
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/dom-ie7-zoom-detector.html
Let’s fix this and see no more [BUTTON] tags , [input type=image /] or dirty CSS /HTML / JS for this simple lovely button.
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/ui-css-input-replacement/demo.php
BTW, what’s the difference between Link and Button?
( one of my interview question for interaction designer)
one of my co-workers asked the way to deploy grid-like layout for list-item with nice alignment and visual treatment.
Apparently a more flexible design and layout will make this better and old school CSS solution such as “float:left” won’thelp in the case.
I had a very simple prototype on :
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/css-inline-block-layout.php
you may try to adjust the font-size, window-size and see how this fluid layout adjust to your best-view-size and still keeps the UI looks nice and aligned well.
BTW, in case you may not notice the very inconvenient truth. Some might think that block Element s such as DIV does not get display:inline-block on Internet Explorer. This may not be true.
Here’s how do I implement display:inline-block across browsers:
‹style›
div{
width:100px;
height:100px;
background:red;
margin:1px;
display:-moz-inline-stack;/*Firefox need this to simulate display:inline-block*/
display:inline-block; /*IE does not apply this to Block Element, and Firefox does not render this, too*/
_overflow:hidden;/*fix IE6 to expanded content*/
zoom:1;/*trigger hasLayout*/
*display:inline;/*once hasLayout is true, set display:inline to block element will make display:inline behave like display:inline-block*/
}
‹/style›
‹div›1‹/div›
‹div›2‹/div›
One of the layout which designers love most and developers hate most is something looks like this:
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/css-layout-gridview.html
No time for documentation, just keep it simple for future usage.
It’s better than checking window.XmlHttpRequest ![]()
( and I thought I should have finished this article in two lines instead of explaining it)
Detecting Element.outerHTML periodically to see if an Element is fully parsed and avoid Operation Abort Error.
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/ie-dom-oncontentready/doc.php
So much love & hate for IE6
http://www.hedgerwow.com/360/dhtml/ie6-css-hack-import-js.html