What javascript does is allow you to start loading the images in the HEAD section of your page, which means that with this technique (unless the images are large or great in number) your viewers will have the necessary images in their browser's cache before the script starts to run. This way, an image rollover will be less likely to make the viewers wait for the browser to download the second image, because it is in their browser's cache.
Perhaps you're on vacation and didn't feel like lugging your laptop along with you. But of course you're taking pictures. You can now clean up those photos and even do more advanced image editing from any internet café. A crop of web-based photo editing programs has sprouted up over the past year, mostly based on AJAX or Flash.
You can find a lot of advice regarding color schemes, layouts, and other suggestions from "web design gurus" - they are about design. Naturally, we should follow basic design criteria, but the fact is, nobody but us, can make our sites very individual, very personal, and very different.
A great javascript library has created by Ara Pehlivanian that allows you to add reflection to your images using simple JS that adds just one DOM element.
In HTML, an image map is a list of coordinates relating to a specific image, created in order to hyperlink areas of the image to various destinations. An image map is an image that has "active regions". When the user selects one of the regions, some action takes place -- a link may be followed, information may be sent to a server, etc. To make an image map accessible, content developers must ensure that each action associated with a visual region may be activated without a pointing device.
This script preloads images and displays the percentage loaded, before calling a user-defined Javascript function.
This article is talking about how to preload interface images for submit button in forms, like the one at the web.burza contact form.
Since the script takes care of generating thumbnail images after the web document has been loaded, the only additions that I’ll introduce into the original source code will be an “onload” event handler tied to the “window” object, for building in the thumbnails, as well as the required global variables used within the application.
In this gallery, the images are floating. This means that the number of images on each row is determined by the width of the browser window. This script also allows you to rearrange the order of the images by dragging
This is a gallery script for equally sized images. A fade in - fade out effect is used to move smoothly from one image to the next.
Ajaxlines is a project focused on providing its audience with a database of most of Ajax related articles, resources, tutorials and services from around the world.
Its purpose is to showcase the power of Ajax and to act as a portal to the Ajax development community.
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