Glad you approve!  Let me know if you encounter any hiccups while using it. :)

On Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 9:00 PM, brian<bally.z...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Very nice! I'd been playing with something along these lines but it's
> really buggy (and I'm lazy). Kudos for the 'classname' option. I much
> prefer to specify a 'loading' image with CSS than to pass the filename
> to a JS object. And it doesn't require dimensions (mine does). I'll
> quietly retire my little experiment now.
>
> On Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 11:39 PM, Nathan Bubna<nbu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> http://plugins.jquery.com/project/loading
>>
>> If you need to let the user know something is happening in the
>> background, this is the easiest way.  It handles creation,
>> positioning, masking/blocking stuff behind, and even "pulsing" the
>> loading message with a few simple options.  Of course, there's more
>> than a few options.  Everything is configurable and extensible.  It's
>> even easy to create your own pulsing/spinning/throbbing effects, and
>> it can display text (default), images or any element you like with
>> ease and simplicity.  It works page-wide with a "static" call:
>>
>> $.loading(true, {mask:true})
>>
>> or per-element, with chaining and all:
>>
>> $('#foo').loading({ align:'center' })
>>
>> The best way to start seeing what can be done and how to use it is to
>> play with the demo:
>>
>> http://jquery-values.googlecode.com/svn/other/loading/jquery.loading.htm
>>
>> Enjoy.  And if you find bugs or have more clever ideas for it, let me
>> know.  I like feedback of all kinds.
>>
>

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