Hi Dan,

i don't know if i understand you correctly (sorry, i'm german ;)). It is
possible to setup the carousel with just one line:

    jQuery('.jcarousel').jcarousel();

If no button handlers are passed, their state just stays as it was on
loading and only the click events for next/prev are binded/unbinded.

Jan



Dan Atkinson wrote:
> 
> Jan,
> 
> This is a sweet sweet start you've got off to here, with jCarousel!
> 
> As said, it's very polished for a first release, and I can see this being
> used in a number of places. I've had a quick play about with it, and I'm
> definately impressed. Also, getting your first release on the jquery blog
> is sweet!
> 
> I think that as, a future consideration, you may want to scale down on the
> in-page options for beginners, and just allow users to call the main
> options. Eg:
> 
>     jQuery('.jcarousel').jcarousel({
>         itemWidth : 85,
>         itemHeight : 75,
>         itemVisible: 3,
>         itemScroll: 2,
>         scrollAnimation: 'slow',
>         autoScroll: 3,
>         wrap: true
>     });
> 
> This would help. Not only for beginners, but for those who don't want to
> clutter up their pages with JS functions.
> 
> Maybe the next and previous button handlers could be overridden from
> defaults in the jcarousel file, if desired?
> 
> Anyhow, I'm sure you've probably got a mountain of feedback to go through,
> so I'll leave you with best wishes.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Dan
> 

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