- The test case calls changePage() with a hash ("#b"). In our normal processing of clicks/form submits we strip it before calling. The old code did a strip in changePage() just in case, so I added it back in to fix the last bug.
- Check the returned active object to see if it is valid before attempting to extract the transition out of it. Default to $.mobile.defaultDialogTransition if there is no active object.
- Modified changePage() to set isPageTransitioning earlier.
- Modified pageSequence() to allow the current changepage callback stack to unwind before firing off the next function in the sequence.
Modified the hashchange callback so that it specifies a "none" transition, instead of a false boolean, for the case where the hash changed and there is nothing on the urlHistory stack.
- loadPage() now loads all pages into the DOM.
- changePage() only functions on pages that are in the DOM. If you call it with a URL instead of an element, it will call loadPage() which will then trigger a call to changePage() with the resulting page at a later time.
- Modified changePage() so that it can take an options object. Updated all references throughout the framework.
- Split $.mobile.pageLoading() into 2 functions $.mobile.show/hidePageLoadingMsg(). Updated docs accordingly.
- Renamed $.mobile.defaultTransition to $.mobie.defaultPageTransition. Updated docs accordingly.
- Added $.mobile.defaultDialogTransition so that it isn't hard coded in the changePage/transitionPages and select code.
- Hand integrated jquery.mobile.navigation.js checkins from master: 4b4ee54a, e775f5e8, e597ccb3, 084bbbd8.
jQuery Search Textbox change to add new focus event which will show clear button when some item gets pasted directly without key event to search text box. Thanks joshiabk
If 'input' element has id string with dots in it, code fails. Fixed by tweaking the regex to escape dots in the selector. Thanks markandy and eddiemonge
In the $.ajax() callback, we look for elements with @href, @src, and @data-ajax="false" elements, the code then assumes that matching elements will have either @href or @src, which of course forms don't ... they have @action ... so the code throws an exception because thisUrl is undefined.
- I reworked the code to handle action and check to make sure we have an attribute and url string before attempting to use them.
This was caused by this checkin:
4b4ee54a72
The change caused the base tag to be reset to file:// (literally with no path).
All that was missing was a small tweak to base.reset() to use the new initialPath variable instead of docBase.
Remove greedy matches from start and end of regex - there's no need for them, and they cause immense slowdown (on the order of 3-4 seconds on medium-size pages loaded via ajax).
* whitespace within parenthesis
* double quotes
* line breaking for object key assignments
Also made several changes suggested by jsHint.
All tests pass as before -- still failing first three tests as before.
Signed-off-by: Steven Black <steveb@stevenblack.com>
The expected prototype for a transitionHandler is as follows:
function handler(name, reverse, $to, $from)
The name parameter is the name of the transition as specified by @data-transition attribute, reverse is a boolean that is false for a normal transition, and true for a reverse transition. The $to param is a jQuery collection containing the page that is being transitioned "to", and $from is an optional collection that tells us what page we are transitioning "from". Because $from is optional, handler developers should take care and check $from to make sure it is not undefined before attempting to dereference it.
In addition to registering custom transition by name, developers can specify a handler to use in the case where a transition name is specified and does not exist within the $.mobile.transitionHanlders dictionary. Within jQuery Mobile, the default handler for unknown transition types is the $.mobile.css3Transition() handler. This handler always assumes that the transition name is to be used as a CSS class to be placed on the $to and $from elements. To change the default handler, simply set $.mobile.defaultTransitionHandler to you function handler:
$.mobile.defaultTransitionHandler = myTransitionHandler;
The changes to make all this necessary are as follows:
- Created $.mobile.noneTransitionHandler which is the default transitionHandler for the framework that simply adds and removes the page active class on the $from and $to pages with no animations.
- Moved class based transition code into a new plugin jquery.mobile.transition.js file. This plugin, when present, overrides the noneTransitionHandler as the defaultTranstionHandler for the framework so that CSS3 animation transitions are available.
- Removed code related to the setting/removal of the ui-mobile-viewport-perspective class. The css3TransitionHandler plugin takes care of automatically placing a "viewport-<transition name>" class on the viewport (body) element. This allows any other transition to specify properties on the viewport that are necessary to accomplish the transition.
- changed the CSS class ui-mobile-viewport-perspective to viewport-flip to match code changes. This makes it more apparent that setting -webkit-perspective is only used with the flip transition.
- Updated js/index.php, Makefile and build.xml to include the new jquery.mobile.transition.js file.
The expected prototype for a transitionHandler is as follows:
function handler(name, reverse, $to, $from)
The name parameter is the name of the transition as specified by @data-transition attribute, reverse is a boolean that is false for a normal transition, and true for a reverse transition. The $to param is a jQuery collection containing the page that is being transitioned "to", and $from is an optional collection that tells us what page we are transitioning "from". Because $from is optional, handler developers should take care and check $from to make sure it is not undefined before attempting to dereference it.
In addition to registering custom transition by name, developers can specify a handler to use in the case where a transition name is specified and does not exist within the $.mobile.transitionHanlders dictionary. Within jQuery Mobile, the default handler for unknown transition types is the $.mobile.css3Transition() handler. This handler always assumes that the transition name is to be used as a CSS class to be placed on the $to and $from elements. To change the default handler, simply set $.mobile.defaultTransitionHandler to you function handler:
$.mobile.defaultTransitionHandler = myTransitionHandler;
The changes to make all this necessary are as follows:
- Created $.mobile.noneTransitionHandler which is the default transitionHandler for the framework that simply adds and removes the page active class on the $from and $to pages with no animations.
- Moved class based transition code into a new plugin jquery.mobile.transition.js file. This plugin, when present, overrides the noneTransitionHandler as the defaultTranstionHandler for the framework so that CSS3 animation transitions are available.
- Removed code related to the setting/removal of the ui-mobile-viewport-perspective class. The css3TransitionHandler plugin takes care of automatically placing a "viewport-<transition name>" class on the viewport (body) element. This allows any other transition to specify properties on the viewport that are necessary to accomplish the transition.
- changed the CSS class ui-mobile-viewport-perspective to viewport-flip to match code changes. This makes it more apparent that setting -webkit-perspective is only used with the flip transition.
- Updated js/index.php, Makefile and build.xml to include the new jquery.mobile.transition.js file.
Removed the return false in the vclick handler of collapsible and replaced it with a preventDefault(). The only reason we were returning false was to stopPropagation() so that the vclick handler in navigation.js didn't place a ui-btn-active on it.
- Check for existence of the bindings object before attempting to use it. Apparently jQuery core strips off any data bindings of an element before calling teardown on it to remove special event handlers.