I have a chat script in php that is working great, I use meta refresh to see new posts and that is very irritating for the users. I have come across many a javascript that claims no flicker in the refresh, but they do.
I don't know that much javascript, but I have heard thet AJAX can be used to poll to the server to get data without refreshing. I have been searching like crazy and I haven't seen very many tutorials for this.
I have my server side script working, I just want to refresh without flicker. Does anyone know how to call to the server script without refreshing the page?
My company just redid our web site...http:[url]....
We know we have a few kinks to work out, but one of them that I can't figure out involves the top nav... It is grows and shrinks when you scroll updown, and during that process flickers where ever there is flash behind it. Likewise, there is a loading gif that we put in when you change pages, and it also flickers.It only seems to be on FF on PC or Mac.I've already tried messing with solid background colours, and z-indexs on the container that's flickering and that doesn't seem to do it.
I am writing a small script to fade the opacity of an image/object. The script itself works fine only I do have some unwanted behaviour.
I do use a tablecell object and the mouseover/mouseout to activate the script. In the same cell are some links listed and when you move the cursor over the links the image starts to flicker. This is because of the getElementById that identifies each link as an object.
Anyone knows how I can solve this behaviour? (Below is the sourcecode I use)
Bit of the opposite of what a lot of people seem to be after it seems, but I was wondering if it is possible to make an image "flicker" randomly by randomly changing how transparent it is?The goal is to create a flickering neon sign, but to do it without using flash. I've got the flickering working fine in flash, but just not loading fine without messing things up so I'm hoping I can do it with jquery or even just js.
Since jQuery.browser and jQuery.browser.version are depreciated as of jQuery 1.3, what is the preferred way to check if the browser (in this case IE6) needs to have the "BackgroundImageCache" set?The closest match I see is jQuery.support.opacity, but I'm not sure if that is pertaining to how the browser interprets the alpha properties of images or if it's other elements as well? Ref: document.execCommand("BackgroundImageCache", false, true)[URL]...
I have an issue with a spry accordion panel causing a flicker. The page is at: [URL] When I do a keyword search however and get a list of results, the flicker dissapears. It is flickering on some pages and not on others.
I've adapted code from theslideSwitch.js tutorialby Jon Raasch, which is basically a fading slideshow. The script promotes the 'active' slide to a higher z-index and animates the opacity for a fading effect. It's working fine with a pause added to stop the slideshow temporarily on mouseover. The issue I'm having is I'm trying to stop the script from queuing up when repeatedly mousing over/off the slideshow. When this happens it flickers and goes berserk. I've experimented withstop(true,true)in various locationsbut haven't got it working properly. Where to insert this in the following code?
Code is below... // slideshow function function slideSwitch() { var $active = $('#hp-featured div.active'); if ( $active.length == 0 ) $active = $('#hp-featured div:last'); var $next = $active.next().length ? $active.next() : $('#hp-featured div:first'); $active.addClass('last-active'); $next.css({opacity: 0.0}) .addClass('active') .animate({opacity: 1.0}, 1000, function() { $active.removeClass('active last-active'); });}; var playSlideshow = setInterval( "slideSwitch()", 5000 ); // pauses the slideshow on mouseover, then plays again on mouseout $(function() { $('#hp-featured div').hover(function() { clearInterval(playSlideshow); }, function() { playSlideshow = setInterval( "slideSwitch()", 5000 ); });});
I have 2 monitors from a different size. It is important in my application that I get the screen size of the monitor where the webbrowser is located. When I try to get the screen size (window.screen.height + window.screen.width) only IE gives me always the screen size of the main monitor where my taskbar (windows7) is located, instead of the screen size of the secondary screen where the webbrowser is located.
I have this code in a page that appears in my iframe if requested from parent:
<script type="text/javascript"> parent.rrr(); </script> The parent code is: function rrr() { javascript:location.reload(true); }
So, the person clicks a link from the parent, it does a php process in a hidden iframe, which then tells the parent page to refresh. The only problem is that it puts Firefox in a constant loop of refreshing. IE and Chrome work fine. They refresh once and stop.
Though the src code opens the iframe like so: <iframe src="" style="display:none; height:1px;" name="hdplus" id="hdplus"></iframe> Firefox seems to refresh the page with the memory of the child page being in the iframe, constantly looping the child request to refresh the parent.
Why won't Firefox just accept that no page should load in the iframe, as stated in the code? I need to stop this loop, which means I need to get firefox to reset the iframe as it reloads the page.
I have a div that has a negative top margin and a negative right margin. The right margin is because I want to have the div slide onto the page from the right. The top margin is because without it my page height is the height of the visible elements plus the height of the off-screen div.On a button click, I move the div down and then animate it onto the screen from the right. On button click again, I animate the div to the right, off the screen, and then move it up. I also toggle its width & padding so it will appear to grow/shrink as it moves on/off screen. At least that's what I am trying to do. The animation onto the screen looks good, but going off the screen, it appears to happen intantaneously, instead of animatedDoes anyone know how I can fix this?
$(".addPanels").live("click", function(){//now and in the future, show the add panels menu var thisAddPanelsMenu = $(this).parent().prev(".addPanelsMenu");//get the addPanelsMenu if(thisAddPanelsMenu.length) {//if the addPanelsMenu exists
I have created a ticket system where users can submit their problem. After several month of experience it appears that offering a zone to paste a screen shot will be ideal. Is there anyway to acheive this without pasting to a word doc, and upload it?
There must be an apostrophe or some other little javascript nuisance that I'm still including in this script, but whenever I try it out, nothing shows..it is supposed to randomly display some text and a link Code:
I was wondering if it is possible to maximise a screen in javascript.
right now, I use this code:
A HREF="heritage.html" onClick="msgWindow=window.open ('heritage.html','fullWindow','toolbar=no,location =no,directories=no,status= no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,width=8 30,height=630'); return false" onmouseover="window.status='open site in full screen' return true" CLASS=TP>open full screen</A>
, but I was wondering if we can fill the entire screen?