This is awesome... thanks for putting this together. I'm at the tail end of finishing a major iPhone web app based on iUI and jQuery. I'll give your addon a try and give you my feedback.
On Apr 15, 5:41 pm, Jonathan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I've started a jQuery iPhone plugin project to extend jQuery > functionality for specific iPhone features. > > Project Page:http://plugins.jquery.com/project/iphone > Direct Download:http://jquery.thewikies.com/iphone/jquery.iphone.zip > > So far it's not much, but what it does do you may find very useful, > and for jQuery users it should be fairly simple, because this script > tries to always keep with the jQuery lexicon. Here is an example of > jQuery. > > $(document).ready( > function(){ > $('body').html('<p>The entire site body was replaced with > this text > before you even saw it!</p>'); > } > ); > > One thing my script will do is hide the URL bar, regardless of the > height of your page or if you have a stylesheet present. It just > works. > > $(document).ready( > function(){ > $.iPhone.hideURLbar(); // This will hide the URL bar when the > page > first appears. > } > ); > > Also, you can disable and reenable the automatic text size adjustments > when rotating your iphone to different angles. > > $(document).ready( > function(){ > $.iPhone.disableTextSizeAdjust(); // No text resizing right > from the > get-go. > } > ); > > Finally, (and I'm working on more functions, so I'm sorry there are so > few so far), you can automatically detect and launch functions based > on whenever the iPhone makes a rotation change / orientation change / > tilt change / whatever-you-want-to-call-it. > > $(document).iPhone.orientchange( > function(){ > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen'); > } > ); > > Following the jQuery standard of extensibility, you can write custom > functions for portrait and landscape, separately. > > $(document).iPhone.orientchange( > function(){ > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen to portrait'); > }, > function(){ > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen to landscape'); > } > ); > > Or you can also write custom functions for portrait, 90 degree > landscape, and -90 degree landscape. > $(document).iPhone.orientchange( > function() { > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen to portrait'); > }, > function() { > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen to a 90 degree > landscape'); > }, > function() { > alert('the iphone has rotated the screen to a -90 degree > landscape'); > } > ); > > That's all for now. Any feedback is gold to me. :) --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "iPhoneWebDev" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/iphonewebdev?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
