diff --git a/docs/toolbars/docs-headers.html b/docs/toolbars/docs-headers.html old mode 100755 new mode 100644 index b9b4cadd..1324f7dd --- a/docs/toolbars/docs-headers.html +++ b/docs/toolbars/docs-headers.html @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@
jQuery Mobile has a feature to automatically create and append "back" buttons to any header, though it is disabled by default. This is primarily useful in chromeless installed applications, such as those running in a native app web view. The framework automatically generates a "back" button on a header when the page plugin's addBackBtn option is true. This can also be set via markup if the page div has a data-add-back-btn="true" attribute.
If you use the attribute data-rel="back" on an anchor, any clicks on that anchor will mimic the back button, going back one history entry and ignoring the anchor's default href. This is particularly useful when linking back to a named page, such as a link that says "home", or when generating "back" buttons with JavaScript, such as a button to close a dialog. When using this feature in your source markup, be sure to provide a meaningful href that actually points to the URL of the referring page (this will allow the feature to work for users in C-Grade browsers. Also, pease keep in mind that if you just want a reverse transition without actually going back in history, you should use the data-direction="reverse" attribute instead.
If you use the attribute data-rel="back" on an anchor, any clicks on that anchor will mimic the back button, going back one history entry and ignoring the anchor's default href. This is particularly useful when linking back to a named page, such as a link that says "home", or when generating "back" buttons with JavaScript, such as a button to close a dialog. When using this feature in your source markup, be sure to provide a meaningful href that actually points to the URL of the referring page (this will allow the feature to work for users in C-Grade browsers. Also, please keep in mind that if you just want a reverse transition without actually going back in history, you should use the data-direction="reverse" attribute instead.