I'm working on adding some code to a section of a client's site which plays a video and then uses jQuery to fade the video out and fade a dynamic slideshow in. I think I can do this by using the jQuery support for video events, but that won't work for older browsers which are displaying the video using flowplayer. Is there a way for me to use jQuery to detect whether a browser supports the video tag conditionally so that I can fall back on a delay before the fade out for older browsers?
I have a video gallery with a bigger div with width 500 pixels where the main video is waiting to be played and below is a smaller div with all the others videos from the gallery having width of 80 pixels.The list of video are managed by a content management system in PHP and are the result of youtube "Share Embed action" where the result is an iframe with the link for the video.How can i clicking on a video from the smaller div see the video being displayed in the bigger div ? already playing? or in a new layer above the website ?For now the video plays in the div it is located at.As an example here is the source video format :
I'm going to make an attempt at coding a nice tree menu that is decent with browser support.
I want the tree to be displayed on all browsers (well, within a decent range). Of course, on older browsers, the menu won't be as functional.
Now, I'm going to be combining the javascript with a server-side language (asp.NET) and I'll be able to do some basic browser detection on the server.
But, I read about javascript object detection and am wondering how well that works exactly.
Like, what if a browser that doesn't support objects period tries to run some object detection code? Also, which browsers support user defined objects?
See, I'm thinking of breaking down the script in 3 categories. Browsers that won't get any javascript... these would be the browsers that don't support object detection, browsers with basic javascript... with these I would be able to code my own object and I would test for different features. And then there would be the browsers that can run it all.
So, basically, my question is what browsers support what features and how should I break down my code between them? A long time ago (back in the Netscape 4 / IE4 days) I did some javascripting, but since then I haven't really done any. I remember that NS4 didn't support div tags but supported layers... anyway, it got really messy.
I am currently writing a CMS and I need a few minor variable values from the YouTube Api. I wish to embed a YouTube video into a page and then extract key information about that video such as:
1. The Title 2. The duration 3. The number of hits
I'm trying to create a video box on a website that plays a youtube video and then automatically plays random recommended videos with no break in playback. An endless playlist created by youtube based on the initial video. Youtube uses Javascript API. I have never used Javascript before but i'm just trying to get the video to play as above. There are few tutorials online and I couldn't find anyone trying to do a similar thing.
We are having an issue with the video playing on our client's site. The video plays fully locally but not fully once set live on the any of the browsers, it plays just the first 15secs, then it stops.
Can anyone share some ideas as to how we can resolve this. The player is in Flash, and uses an eternal XML file for the video. We have checked and all connection are correct.
Header Code:
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/swfobject/2.2/swfobject.js"></script> Body Code <script type="text/javascript"> var flashvars = {
so that when you click on the thumbnails it also displays the video description underneath the video, a count, i.e. 1 of 3 etc. and previous and next buttons. Should I be using another plugin or is there a way with this one?
I am new to javascript (I started learning it today) so please explain it for newbies.I am trying to get the amount of video (in seconds) buffered already by the client and the whole duration of the video.Then, I divide them to get the precentage which was buffered so far.I have no problem storing the durating using:var duration = document.getElementById('vid').duration- returns "12.6" (seconds).I am struggling with getting the buffered time. I tried: var buffered = document.getElementById('vid').buffered.This one returns "[object TimeRanges]".From what I understood this is some kind of an object (Like an array?).I tried returning "buffered.length" and I get "1" back.
On my website I have a video player at the top and below that a list of videos. Users click on one of the videos and that video begins playing in the player at the top of the page. Is there any way that the link the user clicks to play the video can also jump to the video player at the top of the page? I've tried various hyperlinks but I can't get it to work. The videos play fine, but the users don't realize that they need to scroll back up to the top of the page to see the video.
[URL]
#### below is the video player #### <div id='videoPlayback' style='width: 425px; height:344px;'> <!-- <div style='width: 425px; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; margin-top: 10px;'> -->
I'm looking to duplicate the video-embedding technique shown on revision5.com, whereby they show the flash video to all platforms where flash is available, and only show the HTML5 player on mobile devices. Is there a browser-sniffing framework, or some other method available to accomplish this?
I have created a transparent flash video (virtual spokesperson) for my website. For demoing purposes, I would like to have this appear on any desired website.
This is what I am trying to produce - here a virtual spokesperson appears on the [url]website: [url]
Have a look at other sites which enable one to type in a URL and their demo virtual spokesperson appears on the given site: [url] [url]
I believe they do this within an iframe to display the underlying website.
Simple enough. This beautiful plugin is what I"m using:[URL]..The problem is, it has no documentation on how to detect a post failure. I know these are rare, but I'd like to code defensively.
I'm relatively new to jQuery and have just been learning the basics/playing around with plugins etc. I'm building a site that uses a jQuery page easing (where is scrolls smoothly down to an anchor element on the same page) - however, the script isn't working great in opera despite me trying all suggested fixes, so i have decided to have opera just page jump as per the default browser action.
My question is - Is there a way of a) detecting which browser the user is using and then if it's NOT Opera, writing the pageEase script to the page?
01) I would like to rollover (onmouseover?) a button that is a video and have the video (button) play. (A 5 sec video that stops at end)
02) On rolloff (onmouseoff?) the same button I would like it to rewind to the beginning for next rollover.
03) I would like to add more of these "Video Button Rollovers" to the same website page in the future. I would like to use DreamWeaver CS4, and stay away from flash for more accessibility and less memory intensive overhead. (obviously no control-bar for video)
I have all the parts to this to try a variety of solutions. The video is a box with untied string on a white background. When played a person fades-on and ties the string into a bow. (white background matches website background)
Parts:
01) video from untied box to tied box with person .mov 02) image of first frame of video .jpg 03) video from untied box to tied box with person to person fade-off and untied box .mov 04) video of tied box with person to person fade-off and untied box.mov
From the little I've read in this plugin's source code, ajaxSubmit() switches to "iframe mode" whenever it detects a file link in the form. The file is uploaded fine, but the server, which normally replies with different content. based on HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH header, fails to do its thing. This header is normally set to "XMLHttpRequest" on normal jQuery .ajax() calls.
The server I'm running is on rails, and I'm using the "request.xhr?" test.
I admit I'm not too familiar with iframes (or jQuery, for that matter:), but surely there must be a way to get around this, so that this can act as a simple drop-in replacement. Should I be looking at other headers, like "Accepts" or the kind, or should the plugin (or my code) be forcing the HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH header?
Let me introduce free PHP IDE with available JQuery plug-in (paid):
Codelobster PHP Edition ([url]) - has all standart abilities for editing code - PHP/HTML/CSS/JavaScript highlighting, autocomplete, code structure - PHP debugger - code folding, tooltips, help and etc.
And it has special JQuery features: - autocomplete for JQuery library - context and dynamic help for JQuery library
I was trying to use a jQuery timer to repeat a function at intervals, but it didn't work in IE. Then I read that IE doesn't support setInterval, which seems amazing. Did I read this right? And if so, what do I use in jQuery to keep repeating a function at intervals? I've tried a few things and they all bomb out in IE, just doing something once, although they work in FF. What works in the execrable IE and real browsers?
at least going to be a double post from in the jQuery Plugin list. I'm being moderated yet on that list, and it doesn't seem to get much activity.I'm going to post this here since the Tablesorter developer hasn't gotten back to me yet.I took a copy of the latest version in SVN and modified it to have jQuery UI Theme support. It seems to work very well and anyone is welcome to use it.[code]I was hoping this would be included into tablesorter so I just threw up the modified version on my work site for now.
I am quite under the impression that I can make any CSS property work across the browser ( By that I mean IE6 ) using jquery. I guess I have written it right. Am I under wrong impression? I mean if it supports Opacity property, it might as well support min-width & min-height.
Every 2 to 3 days I check the ticket system to see how the development of the latest JQueryUI 1.9 is doing and how the JQuery is doing. After several weeks of this I have found way too many tickets about IE6 issues and I started to ask myself why does JQuery and actually, many other projects still try to solve problems for somethings that is beyond repair. With this am talking to the fact that:
I have a page with a script that works only in IE and as I heard from feedbacks it doesn't run under IE on Mac.
I have browser type redirect script for that page that seems to be working fine except it doesn't detect the OS ( IE on Mac just gives blank page). Can someone add to the code that I would give me one page for IE on Windows and another one for all others? Code: