jQuery Plugins

jQuery Plugins

A plug-in is piece of code written in a standard JavaScript file. These files provide useful jQuery methods which can be used along with jQuery library methods.

There are plenty of jQuery plug-in available which you can download from repository link athttp://jquery.com/plugins.

How to use Plugins:

To make a plug-in's methods available to us, we include plug-in file very similar to jQuery library file in the <head> of the document.

We must ensure that it appears after the main jQuery source file, and before our custom JavaScript code.

Following example shows how to includejquery.plug-in.js plugin:

<html>

<head>

<title>the title</title>

   <script type="text/javascript"

   src="/jquery/jquery-1.3.2.min.js"></script>

 

   <script src="jquery.plug-in.js" type="text/javascript">

   </script>

 

   <script src="custom.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

 

   <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">

  

   $(document).ready(function() {

 

    .......your custom code.....

 

   });

 

   </script>

</head>

<body>

 

   .............................

 

</body>

</html>

How to develop a Plug-in

This is very simple to write your own plug-in. Following is the syntax to create a a method:

jQuery.fn.methodName =methodDefinition;

Here methodNameM is the name of new method and methodDefinition is actual method definition.

The guideline recommended by the jQuery team is as follows:

Any methods or functions you attach must have a semicolon (;) at the end.

Your method must return the jQuery object, unless explicity noted otherwise.

You should use this.each to iterate over the current set of matched elements - it produces clean and compatible code that way.

Prefix the filename with jquery, follow that with the name of the plugin and conclude with .js.

Always attach the plugin to jQuery directly instead of $, so users can use a custom alias via noConflict() method.

For example, if we write a plugin that we want to name debug, our JavaScript filename for this plugin is:

jquery.debug.js

The use of the jquery. prefix eliminates any possible name collisions with files intended for use with other libraries.

Example:

Following is a small plug-in to have warning method for debugging purpose. Keep this code injquery.debug.js file:

jQuery.fn.warning = function() {

    return this.each(function() {

       alert('Tag Name:"' + $(this).attr("tagName") + '".');

    });

};

Here is the example showing usage of warning() method. Assuming we put jquery.debug.js file in/jquery subdirectory:

<html>

<head>

<title>the title</title>

   <script type="text/javascript"

   src="/jquery/jquery-1.3.2.min.js"></script>

   <scriptsrc="/jquery/jquery.debug.js" type="text/javascript">

   </script>

 

   <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">

  

   $(document).ready(function() {

     

      $("div").warning();

      $("p").warning();

 

   });

 

   </script>

</head>

<body>

 

  <p>This is paragraph</p>

  <div>This is division</div>

 

</body>

</html>

This would produce following result:

Tag Name:"DIV"

Tag Name:"P"

 

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