The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery 1.7 that provides an overview of jQuery core functionality, selectors, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, AJAX, utilities, callbacks, data, and deferred objects. It includes icons to denote new or changed features in jQuery 1.7 and uses formatting to organize the content into sections.
This document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors and core functions in jQuery 1.5. It provides descriptions and examples for various jQuery selectors including basic, hierarchy, content filter, child filter selectors. It also summarizes some core jQuery functions like get, index, length, selector and more.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled D, and data types are abbreviated.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, and effects. It includes a legend explaining the icons used to represent different data types. It also provides examples of various selector types including basic, attribute, form, and visibility filters.
This document discusses Domain Driven Design (DDD) value objects. It defines value objects as immutable objects that measure or describe a concept but have no identity. Their equality is based on attribute values rather than identity. The document outlines characteristics of value objects such as being immutable, having attributes that form a conceptual whole, being replaceable, supporting equality comparisons, and having side-effect-free methods. It provides examples of value objects and discusses standard types, storage, testing, implementations, and resources for further information on DDD value objects.
This document outlines topics covered in a lecture on object oriented JavaScript using the Prototype framework, including:
- Revision of object oriented JavaScript concepts like objects, prototypes, and classes
- Prototype framework utilities like $, $$ and Enumerable
- Extending DOM elements using Prototype methods
- Templates, form management, and getting element dimensions
- Event handling and classes/inheritance in Prototype
- JSON encoding/parsing
- Ajax utilities like Ajax.Request and Ajax.Updater
This document summarizes Google App Engine's datastore and data modeling features. The datastore provides scalable storage and querying. It uses models defined by subclasses of Model. Properties on models define data types and are instances of the Property class. Queries use the Query class to retrieve and filter models. Keys uniquely identify entities and are represented as instances of the Key class.
The document is a presentation about web design and development using jQuery. It introduces jQuery and why it is useful, how to include jQuery, and describes 21 helpful jQuery methods such as addClass(), removeClass(), attr(), val(), html(), click(), append(), and more. Each method is explained in 1-2 paragraphs with examples of how to use the method and its parameters. The document concludes with references to the jQuery API documentation for each method.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery 1.7 that provides an overview of jQuery core functionality, selectors, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, AJAX, utilities, callbacks, data, and deferred objects. It includes icons to denote new or changed features in jQuery 1.7 and uses formatting to organize the content into sections.
This document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors and core functions in jQuery 1.5. It provides descriptions and examples for various jQuery selectors including basic, hierarchy, content filter, child filter selectors. It also summarizes some core jQuery functions like get, index, length, selector and more.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled D, and data types are abbreviated.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, and effects. It includes a legend explaining the icons used to represent different data types. It also provides examples of various selector types including basic, attribute, form, and visibility filters.
This document discusses Domain Driven Design (DDD) value objects. It defines value objects as immutable objects that measure or describe a concept but have no identity. Their equality is based on attribute values rather than identity. The document outlines characteristics of value objects such as being immutable, having attributes that form a conceptual whole, being replaceable, supporting equality comparisons, and having side-effect-free methods. It provides examples of value objects and discusses standard types, storage, testing, implementations, and resources for further information on DDD value objects.
This document outlines topics covered in a lecture on object oriented JavaScript using the Prototype framework, including:
- Revision of object oriented JavaScript concepts like objects, prototypes, and classes
- Prototype framework utilities like $, $$ and Enumerable
- Extending DOM elements using Prototype methods
- Templates, form management, and getting element dimensions
- Event handling and classes/inheritance in Prototype
- JSON encoding/parsing
- Ajax utilities like Ajax.Request and Ajax.Updater
This document summarizes Google App Engine's datastore and data modeling features. The datastore provides scalable storage and querying. It uses models defined by subclasses of Model. Properties on models define data types and are instances of the Property class. Queries use the Query class to retrieve and filter models. Keys uniquely identify entities and are represented as instances of the Key class.
The document is a presentation about web design and development using jQuery. It introduces jQuery and why it is useful, how to include jQuery, and describes 21 helpful jQuery methods such as addClass(), removeClass(), attr(), val(), html(), click(), append(), and more. Each method is explained in 1-2 paragraphs with examples of how to use the method and its parameters. The document concludes with references to the jQuery API documentation for each method.
jQuery BootCamp : Creating the Wrapped Element SetWildan Maulana
This document discusses selecting elements and manipulating the wrapped element set in jQuery. It covers:
1. Using basic and advanced CSS selectors like ID, class, tags, attributes, position, and custom selectors to select elements.
2. Creating and adding new HTML elements to the DOM with jQuery.
3. Managing the wrapped element set - determining its size, obtaining elements, slicing/dicing, and adding more elements to the set.
4. Applying jQuery methods like addClass() to the selected elements to manipulate the DOM.
jQuery is a JavaScript framework that simplifies client-side scripting. It allows for selecting elements, traversing DOM structures, handling events, and developing animations and AJAX interactions. jQuery abstracts away cross-browser issues and its API is designed to reduce code for common tasks. It has a simple plug-in model for extending functionality and a large community that has built many plug-ins.
This document advertises Java training courses taught by Marty Hall, the author of several Java books. The courses cover topics such as JSF 2, PrimeFaces, Java 7/8, HTML5, Ajax, jQuery, Hadoop, RESTful Web Services, Android, Spring, and Hibernate. Courses are available both at public venues and on-site at customers' locations. The document also provides contact information for inquiring about course details.
Functional Object-Oriented Imperative Scala / 関数型オブジェクト指向命令型 Scala by Sébasti...scalaconfjp
The document discusses Scala's ability to combine functional and object-oriented programming paradigms. It provides an example of an Emitter class that uses mutable internal state carried between method invocations to improve performance, while maintaining an immutable/functional API that encapsulates the mutable state so it is not observable from outside the class. This approach allows algorithms with mutable data structures internally for readability while preserving the benefits of immutable/functional programming in the public interface.
introduction, The Resolution of Property Names on Objects.
Closure
A "closure" is an expression (typically a function) that can have
free variables together with an environment that binds those
variables (that "closes" the expression)
Java bean properties can be manipulated via getter and setter methods. Properties typically correspond to fields that define the internal state of an object. Properties can be active, bound, constrained, or standalone. Active properties firing events when changed. Bound properties use events to notify listeners of property changes. Constrained properties allow listeners to veto property changes. Simple properties use getter and setter methods to access internal variables.
This document provides an overview of Scala and compares it to Java. It discusses Scala's object-oriented and functional capabilities, how it compiles to JVM bytecode, and benefits like less boilerplate code and support for functional programming. Examples are given of implementing a simple Property class in both Java and Scala to illustrate concepts like case classes, immutable fields, and less lines of code in Scala. The document also touches on Java interoperability, learning Scala gradually, XML processing capabilities, testing frameworks, and tool/library support.
The document discusses Python classes and object-oriented programming concepts. It defines key terms like class, object, method, and inheritance. It provides examples of creating a basic Employee class with methods and instance variables. It also covers class variables, accessing object attributes, adding/removing attributes, inheritance, and overriding methods in subclasses. The goal is to teach Python language essentials for object-oriented programming.
The document compares two approaches to representing design patterns as meta-models:
1) The EMN approach aims to describe patterns for detection and application purposes, with entities and elements linked through roles. Patterns are reified to generate and detect themselves.
2) The TITech approach aims to instantiate patterns by composing pattern classes and encapsulating dependencies. It demonstrates defining the Composite pattern using a pattern meta-library.
3) Key differences are that the EMN approach supports pattern composition while the TITech focuses on representation and instantiation. The EMN also generates equivalent source code representations while TITech stores code as text.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet for jQuery 1.5. It includes summaries of selectors, core functions, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, utilities and deferred objects. The cheat sheet is designed to highlight the main features and capabilities within each category in a concise visual format. Key selectors, methods and properties are defined along with their parameters and return values.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled D, and data types are abbreviated.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled dash.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, and manipulation. It includes descriptions and examples of over 150 different jQuery methods organized into categories including selectors, core, attributes, CSS, traversing, and manipulation. The cheat sheet is designed to be a quick reference for common jQuery selections, objects, functions, and their parameters.
The document describes various jQuery methods for selecting elements, traversing DOM elements, manipulating attributes and properties, and more. It provides brief descriptions of methods like jQuery(), children(), closest(), filter(), find(), and others for selecting and traversing matched elements. The summary also indicates that the document covers attributes like addClass(), attr(), prop(), and val() as well as events, effects, AJAX, and other utilities.
The document contains information about jQuery selectors and methods. It includes:
1) A list of core jQuery methods like jQuery(), noConflict(), and when() as well as selectors like the class selector and ID selector.
2) Descriptions of many attribute methods like addClass(), attr(), removeAttr(), and toggleClass() that get and set element attributes.
3) Summaries of traversal methods like children(), closest(), find(), and filter() that navigate the DOM tree.
4) Details of manipulation methods such as after(), append(), prepend(), remove(), replaceWith(), and text() that modify DOM elements.
The document provides information about jQuery selectors and core functions. It includes a list of selector types like the class selector, ID selector, and attribute selectors. It also summarizes some core jQuery methods like jQuery() to select elements, and methods to manipulate attributes and CSS styles.
Unit 1 - What is jQuery_Why jQuery_Syntax_Selectors.pdfRAVALCHIRAG1
jQuery is a fast and feature-rich JavaScript library used for HTML document traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax interactions. It simplifies tasks like selecting elements, adding/removing classes, handling events, and performing animations. jQuery selects elements using CSS-style selectors and provides methods for manipulating, traversing, and modifying pages on the fly.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, and effects. It includes a legend explaining the icons used to represent different data types. It also provides examples of various selector types including basic, attribute, form, and visibility filters.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, and AJAX utilities. It provides a legend and descriptions for basic selectors like ID, element, class and attribute filters as well as form selectors. The cheat sheet also outlines core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events and effects categories with examples of common jQuery selections and actions.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, and AJAX utilities. It provides a legend and descriptions for basic selectors like ID, element, class and attribute filters as well as form selectors. The cheat sheet also outlines core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events and effects categories with examples of common jQuery selections and actions.
JQuery is a JavaScript library that simplifies HTML document manipulation, event handling, animations, and Ajax interactions. It works across browsers and makes tasks like DOM traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax much simpler. JQuery's versatility, extensibility, and cross-browser compatibility have made it popular, with millions of developers using it to write JavaScript.
jQuery BootCamp : Creating the Wrapped Element SetWildan Maulana
This document discusses selecting elements and manipulating the wrapped element set in jQuery. It covers:
1. Using basic and advanced CSS selectors like ID, class, tags, attributes, position, and custom selectors to select elements.
2. Creating and adding new HTML elements to the DOM with jQuery.
3. Managing the wrapped element set - determining its size, obtaining elements, slicing/dicing, and adding more elements to the set.
4. Applying jQuery methods like addClass() to the selected elements to manipulate the DOM.
jQuery is a JavaScript framework that simplifies client-side scripting. It allows for selecting elements, traversing DOM structures, handling events, and developing animations and AJAX interactions. jQuery abstracts away cross-browser issues and its API is designed to reduce code for common tasks. It has a simple plug-in model for extending functionality and a large community that has built many plug-ins.
This document advertises Java training courses taught by Marty Hall, the author of several Java books. The courses cover topics such as JSF 2, PrimeFaces, Java 7/8, HTML5, Ajax, jQuery, Hadoop, RESTful Web Services, Android, Spring, and Hibernate. Courses are available both at public venues and on-site at customers' locations. The document also provides contact information for inquiring about course details.
Functional Object-Oriented Imperative Scala / 関数型オブジェクト指向命令型 Scala by Sébasti...scalaconfjp
The document discusses Scala's ability to combine functional and object-oriented programming paradigms. It provides an example of an Emitter class that uses mutable internal state carried between method invocations to improve performance, while maintaining an immutable/functional API that encapsulates the mutable state so it is not observable from outside the class. This approach allows algorithms with mutable data structures internally for readability while preserving the benefits of immutable/functional programming in the public interface.
introduction, The Resolution of Property Names on Objects.
Closure
A "closure" is an expression (typically a function) that can have
free variables together with an environment that binds those
variables (that "closes" the expression)
Java bean properties can be manipulated via getter and setter methods. Properties typically correspond to fields that define the internal state of an object. Properties can be active, bound, constrained, or standalone. Active properties firing events when changed. Bound properties use events to notify listeners of property changes. Constrained properties allow listeners to veto property changes. Simple properties use getter and setter methods to access internal variables.
This document provides an overview of Scala and compares it to Java. It discusses Scala's object-oriented and functional capabilities, how it compiles to JVM bytecode, and benefits like less boilerplate code and support for functional programming. Examples are given of implementing a simple Property class in both Java and Scala to illustrate concepts like case classes, immutable fields, and less lines of code in Scala. The document also touches on Java interoperability, learning Scala gradually, XML processing capabilities, testing frameworks, and tool/library support.
The document discusses Python classes and object-oriented programming concepts. It defines key terms like class, object, method, and inheritance. It provides examples of creating a basic Employee class with methods and instance variables. It also covers class variables, accessing object attributes, adding/removing attributes, inheritance, and overriding methods in subclasses. The goal is to teach Python language essentials for object-oriented programming.
The document compares two approaches to representing design patterns as meta-models:
1) The EMN approach aims to describe patterns for detection and application purposes, with entities and elements linked through roles. Patterns are reified to generate and detect themselves.
2) The TITech approach aims to instantiate patterns by composing pattern classes and encapsulating dependencies. It demonstrates defining the Composite pattern using a pattern meta-library.
3) Key differences are that the EMN approach supports pattern composition while the TITech focuses on representation and instantiation. The EMN also generates equivalent source code representations while TITech stores code as text.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet for jQuery 1.5. It includes summaries of selectors, core functions, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, utilities and deferred objects. The cheat sheet is designed to highlight the main features and capabilities within each category in a concise visual format. Key selectors, methods and properties are defined along with their parameters and return values.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX, and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled D, and data types are abbreviated.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, manipulation, events, effects, AJAX and utilities. It includes descriptions of methods and selectors, their parameters and return values. New features in jQuery 1.4.x are marked with an equals sign, deprecated items are marked with a circled dash.
This document provides a visual cheat sheet summary of jQuery selectors, core functionality, attributes, CSS manipulation, traversing, and manipulation. It includes descriptions and examples of over 150 different jQuery methods organized into categories including selectors, core, attributes, CSS, traversing, and manipulation. The cheat sheet is designed to be a quick reference for common jQuery selections, objects, functions, and their parameters.
The document describes various jQuery methods for selecting elements, traversing DOM elements, manipulating attributes and properties, and more. It provides brief descriptions of methods like jQuery(), children(), closest(), filter(), find(), and others for selecting and traversing matched elements. The summary also indicates that the document covers attributes like addClass(), attr(), prop(), and val() as well as events, effects, AJAX, and other utilities.
The document contains information about jQuery selectors and methods. It includes:
1) A list of core jQuery methods like jQuery(), noConflict(), and when() as well as selectors like the class selector and ID selector.
2) Descriptions of many attribute methods like addClass(), attr(), removeAttr(), and toggleClass() that get and set element attributes.
3) Summaries of traversal methods like children(), closest(), find(), and filter() that navigate the DOM tree.
4) Details of manipulation methods such as after(), append(), prepend(), remove(), replaceWith(), and text() that modify DOM elements.
The document provides information about jQuery selectors and core functions. It includes a list of selector types like the class selector, ID selector, and attribute selectors. It also summarizes some core jQuery methods like jQuery() to select elements, and methods to manipulate attributes and CSS styles.
Unit 1 - What is jQuery_Why jQuery_Syntax_Selectors.pdfRAVALCHIRAG1
jQuery is a fast and feature-rich JavaScript library used for HTML document traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax interactions. It simplifies tasks like selecting elements, adding/removing classes, handling events, and performing animations. jQuery selects elements using CSS-style selectors and provides methods for manipulating, traversing, and modifying pages on the fly.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, and effects. It includes a legend explaining the icons used to represent different data types. It also provides examples of various selector types including basic, attribute, form, and visibility filters.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, and AJAX utilities. It provides a legend and descriptions for basic selectors like ID, element, class and attribute filters as well as form selectors. The cheat sheet also outlines core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events and effects categories with examples of common jQuery selections and actions.
The document is a visual cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events, effects, and AJAX utilities. It provides a legend and descriptions for basic selectors like ID, element, class and attribute filters as well as form selectors. The cheat sheet also outlines core functions, attributes, traversing, manipulation, CSS, events and effects categories with examples of common jQuery selections and actions.
JQuery is a JavaScript library that simplifies HTML document manipulation, event handling, animations, and Ajax interactions. It works across browsers and makes tasks like DOM traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax much simpler. JQuery's versatility, extensibility, and cross-browser compatibility have made it popular, with millions of developers using it to write JavaScript.
We have touched as many as topics of JQuery. We have targeted almost all sections of Jquery except Ajax events and response.
Below topics are covered in this presentation:
1. Selectors
2. Events
3. Effects
4. Traversing
5. noConflict()
jQuery is a popular JavaScript library that simplifies HTML document manipulation and event handling. It allows developers to select elements, handle events, perform animations and AJAX calls. jQuery uses CSS selectors to select elements and includes methods for DOM traversal, manipulation, events and effects. It works across browsers and supports plugins for additional functionality.
This document provides an overview of jQuery, including:
- What jQuery is and its main features like event handling, animations, AJAX interactions, and DOM manipulation.
- How to install jQuery and include the jQuery library file in an HTML document.
- Common jQuery syntax using CSS-like selectors to select elements and perform actions.
- Examples of different jQuery selectors like ID, class, and attribute selectors.
- Examples of jQuery methods for manipulating elements like getting/setting values, adding/removing classes.
- How to handle common jQuery events like click, mouseover, and keypress.
- How to retrieve values from a selected table row in jQuery.
This document provides an introduction to jQuery, covering topics such as features, selectors, animations, events, manipulating HTML/CSS, traversing, and Ajax. It explains that jQuery is a free and open-source JavaScript library that simplifies tasks like DOM manipulation, event handling, animations, and Ajax interactions to facilitate rapid web development. Key jQuery concepts discussed include selectors, common animation effects, event handling, manipulating HTML and CSS, traversing DOM elements, and methods for loading remote data via Ajax.
The document provides an overview of Java collection framework and some key classes. It discusses collection interfaces like Collection and Map. It describes commonly used collection classes like ArrayList, LinkedList, HashSet and how to add/access elements. The advantages of collection framework like consistent API and reduced programming effort are highlighted. The StringTokenizer and Date classes are also briefly explained with examples of their usage.
This document provides a summary of jQuery selectors, core functions, traversing methods, events, AJAX capabilities and shorthand methods. It lists various selectors like #id, .class, :first, :even etc. It describes core jQuery functions like $, jQuery, each. It outlines traversing methods to navigate the DOM like children(), closest(), find(), offsetParent(). It also covers events, AJAX including $.ajax(), $.get(), $.post(), and global event handlers.
This document provides a cheat sheet for jQuery selectors, manipulation methods, events, AJAX functions, and utilities. It lists the core jQuery functions, selectors for selecting elements by id, class, tag name and other attributes, and methods for manipulating DOM elements by changing contents, inserting elements, and traversing the DOM tree. The cheat sheet also covers event handling, AJAX requests, effects like showing and hiding elements, and additional utilities for extending jQuery and interoperability with other libraries.
This document provides a summary of jQuery selectors, manipulation methods, events, AJAX functions, and utilities in 3 sentences or less:
jQuery allows selecting elements using CSS selectors, traversing and manipulating the DOM, handling events, making AJAX requests, and extending functionality through plugins. Common tasks include selecting elements by id, class, or other attributes, changing HTML and text contents, binding event handlers for page interactions, and making asynchronous HTTP requests. The cheat sheet also covers animation effects, interactivity helpers, utility functions, and best practices for chaining methods and extending jQuery.
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
Building Production Ready Search Pipelines with Spark and MilvusZilliz
Spark is the widely used ETL tool for processing, indexing and ingesting data to serving stack for search. Milvus is the production-ready open-source vector database. In this talk we will show how to use Spark to process unstructured data to extract vector representations, and push the vectors to Milvus vector database for search serving.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
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jQuery 1.7 visual cheat sheet
1. jQUERY 1.7 CORE ✼ SELECTORS ✼ ATTRIBUTES ✼ TRAVERSING ✼ MANIPULATION ✼ CSS ✼ EVENTS
EFFECTS ✼ AJAX ✼ UTILITIES ✼ CALLBACKS ✼ DATA & MISC ✼ DEFERRED OBJECT
VISUAL CHEAT SHEET
= NEW OR CHANGED IN jQUERY 1.7 / f(x) = FUNCTION / a = ARRAY / jQ = jQUERY / El = ELEMENT / 0-1 = BOOLEAN / Obj = OBJECT / NUM = NUMBER / Str = STRING
❉ CORE Attribute Ends With Selector [name :empty Selector :last-child Selector
$="value"]
Select all elements that have no children (including text nodes). Selects all elements that are the last child of their parent.
jQuery.holdReady( hold ) u Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a
value ending exactly with a given string. The comparison :enabled Selector :last Selector
Holds or releases the execution of jQuery's ready event. is case sensitive.
Selects all elements that are enabled. Selects the last matched element.
jQuery() jQ Attribute Equals Selector [name="value"]
:eq() Selector :lt() Selector
Accepts a string containing a CSS selector which is then Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a
used to match a set of elements. value exactly equal to a certain value. Select the element at index n within the matched set. Select all elements at an index less than index within the
matched set.
jQuery( selector [, context] ) - jQuery( element )
jQuery( object ) - jQuery( elementArray )
Attribute Not Equal Selector [name! :even Selector
jQuery( jQuery object ) Multiple Attribute Selector [name="value"]
="value"] Selects even elements, zero-indexed. [name2="value2"]
Select elements that either don't have the specified
jQuery.noConflict( [removeAll] ) Obj Matches elements that match all of the specified attribute filters.
attribute, or do have the specified attribute but not with a :file Selector
certain value.
Relinquish jQuery's control of the $ variable. Selects all elements of type file. Multiple Selector (“selector1, selector2,
selectorN”)
jQuery.sub() jQ
Attribute Starts With Selector :first-child Selector
[name^="value"] Selects the combined results of all the specified selectors.
Creates a new copy of jQuery whose properties and Selects all elements that are the first child of their parent.
methods can be modified without affecting the original Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a
value beginning exactly with a given string. Next Adjacent Selector (“prev + next”)
jQuery object.
:first Selector
Selects all next elements matching "next" that are immediately
:button Selector Selects the first matched element. preceded by a sibling "prev".
jQuery.when( deferreds ) pr
Selects all button elements and elements of type button.
Provides a way to execute callback functions based on one :focus selector Next Siblings Selector (“prev ~ siblings”)
or more objects, usually Deferred objects that represent
asynchronous events. Selects element if it is currently focused. Selects all sibling elements that follow after the "prev" element,
:checkbox Selector have the same parent, and match the filtering "siblings"
Selects all elements of type checkbox. selector.
:gt() Selector
Select all elements at an index greater than index within the :not() Selector
❉ SELECTORS :checked Selector matched set.
Selects all elements that do not match the given selector.
Matches all elements that are checked.
All Selector (“*”) Has Attribute Selector [name]
:nth-child() Selector
Selects all elements. Child Selector (“parent > child”) Selects elements that have the specified attribute, with any
value. Selects all elements that are the nth-child of their parent.
Selects all direct child elements specified by "child" of
:animated Selector elements specified by "parent".
:has() Selector :odd Selector
Select all elements that are in the progress of an
animation at the time the selector is run. Class Selector (“.class”) Selects elements which contain at least one element that Selects odd elements, zero-indexed.
matches the specified selector.
Selects all elements with the given class.
:only-child Selector
Attribute Contains Prefix Selector [name| :header Selector
="value"] :contains() Selector Selects all elements that are the only child of their parent.
Selects all elements that are headers, like h1, h2, h3 and so on.
Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a Select all elements that contain the specified text.
value either equal to a given string or starting with that :parent Selector
string followed by a hyphen (-). :hidden Selector
Select all elements that are the parent of another element,
Descendant Selector (“ancestor Selects all elements that are hidden. including text nodes.
descendant”)
Attribute Contains Selector
[name*="value"] Selects all elements that are descendants of a given ID Selector (“#id”) :password Selector
ancestor.
Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a Selects a single element with the given id attribute. Selects all elements of type password.
value containing the a given substring.
:disabled Selector
:image Selector :radio Selector
Attribute Contains Word Selector Selects all elements that are disabled.
Selects all elements of type image. Selects all elements of type password.
[name~="value"]
Selects elements that have the specified attribute with a
Element Selector (“element”) :input Selector :reset Selector
value containing a given word, delimited by spaces. Selects all elements with the given tag name. Selects all input, textarea, select and button elements. Selects all elements of type reset.
2. jQUERY 1.7 CORE ✼ SELECTORS ✼ ATTRIBUTES ✼ TRAVERSING ✼ MANIPULATION ✼ CSS ✼ EVENTS
EFFECTS ✼ AJAX ✼ UTILITIES ✼ CALLBACKS ✼ DATA & MISC ✼ DEFERRED OBJECT
VISUAL CHEAT SHEET
= NEW OR CHANGED IN jQUERY 1.7 / f(x) = FUNCTION / a = ARRAY / jQ = jQUERY / El = ELEMENT / 0-1 = BOOLEAN / Obj = OBJECT / NUM = NUMBER / Str = STRING
:selected Selector .removeProp( propertyName ) jQ .filter() jQ .not() jQ
Selects all elements that are selected. Remove a property for the set of matched elements. Reduce the set of matched elements to those that match Remove elements from the set of matched elements.
the selector or pass the function's test.
.not( selector ) - .not( elements ) - .not( function(index) )
:submit Selector .toggleClass( className ) jQ .filter( selector ) - .filter( function(index) )
.filter( element ) - .filter( jQuery object )
Selects all elements of type submit. Add or remove one or more classes from each element in
the set of matched elements, depending on either the .offsetParent() jQ
class's presence or the value of the switch argument. .find( selector ) jQ
:text Selector Get the closest ancestor element that is positioned.
.val() Str Get the descendants of each element in the current set of
Selects all elements of type text. matched elements, filtered by a selector, jQuery object, or
Get the current value of the first element in the set of N element. .parent( [selector] ) jQ
matched elements.
:visible Selector a() .find( selector ) - .find( jQuery object ) - .find( element ) Get the parent of each element in the current set of
.val( value ) - .val( function(index, value) ) matched elements, optionally filtered by a selector.
Selects all elements that are visible. jQ
.first() jQ
Reduce the set of matched elements to the first in the set. .parents( [selector] ) jQ
❉ TRAVERSING
❉ ATTRIBUTES Get the ancestors of each element in the current set of
.has() jQ matched elements, optionally filtered by a selector.
.add() jQ
.addClass() jQ Reduce the set of matched elements to those that have a
Add elements to the set of matched elements. descendant that matches the selector or DOM element.
Adds the specified class(es) to each of the set of matched .parentsUntil() jQ
elements. .add( selector ) - .add( elements ) - .add( html ) .has( selector ) - .has( contained )
Get the ancestors of each element in the current set of
.add( jQuery object ) - .add( selector, context )
.addClass( className ) - .addClass( function(index, matched elements, up to but not including the element
currentClass) ) .is() jQ matched by the selector, DOM node, or jQuery object.
.andSelf() jQ
.parentsUntil( [selector] [, filter] )
.attr() Str Add the previous set of elements on the stack to the Check the current matched set of elements against a .parentsUntil( [element] [, filter] )
current set. selector, element, or jQuery object and return true if at
Get the value of an attribute for the first element in the set least one of these elements matches the given arguments.
of matched elements.
.children( [selector] ) jQ .is( selector ) - .is( function(index) ) - .is( jQuery object )
.attr( attributeName ) - .attr( attributeName, value ) .is( element ) .prev( [selector] ) jQ
Get the children of each element in the set of matched
elements, optionally filtered by a selector. Get the immediately preceding sibling of each element in
.last() jQ the set of matched elements, optionally filtered by a
.hasClass( className ) Str
selector.
Determine whether any of the matched elements are .closest() jQ Reduce the set of matched elements to the final one in the
assigned the given class. set.
Get the first element that matches the selector, beginning a()
at the current element and progressing up through the .prevAll( [selector] ) jQ
.html() Str DOM tree. .map( callback(index, domElement) ) jQ
Get all preceding siblings of each element in the set of
jQ .closest( selector ) - .closest( selector [, context] ) Pass each element in the current matched set through a matched elements, optionally filtered by a selector.
Get the HTML contents of the first element in the set of
.closest( jQuery object ) - .closest( element ) function, producing a new jQuery object containing the
matched elements.
.closest( selectors [ , context ] ) return values.
.html( htmlString ) - .html( function(index, oldhtml) )
.prevUntil() jQ
.contents() jQ
.next( [selector] ) jQ Get all preceding siblings of each element up to but not
.prop() Str Get the children of each element in the set of matched including the element matched by the selector, DOM node,
elements, including text and comment nodes. Get the immediately following sibling of each element in
Get the value of a property for the first element in the set jQ or jQuery object.
the set of matched elements. If a selector is provided, it
of matched elements. retrieves the next sibling only if it matches that selector. .prevUntil( [selector] [, filter] )
.prop( propertyName ) - .prop( propertyName, value )
.each( function(index, Element) ) jQ .prevUntil( [element] [, filter] )
Iterate over a jQuery object, executing a function for each .nextAll( [selector] ) jQ
matched element.
.removeAttr( attributeName ) jQ
Get all following siblings of each element in the set of
matched elements, optionally filtered by a selector. .siblings( [selector] ) jQ
Remove an attribute from each element in the set of .end() jQ
matched elements. Get the siblings of each element in the set of matched
End the most recent filtering operation in the current elements, optionally filtered by a selector.
chain and return the set of matched elements to its .nextUntil() jQ
.removeClass() jQ previous state.
Get all following siblings of each element up to but not
including the element matched by the selector, DOM node, .slice( start [, end] ) jQ
Remove a single class, multiple classes, or all classes from
.eq( index ) jQ or jQuery object passed.
each element in the set of matched elements.
Reduce the set of matched elements to a subset specified
Reduce the set of matched elements to the one at the .nextUntil( [selector] [, filter] ) - .nextUntil( [element] [,
.removeClass( [className] ) by a range of indices.
specified index. filter] )
.removeClass( function(index, class) )
3. jQUERY 1.7 CORE ✼ SELECTORS ✼ ATTRIBUTES ✼ TRAVERSING ✼ MANIPULATION ✼ CSS ✼ EVENTS
EFFECTS ✼ AJAX ✼ UTILITIES ✼ CALLBACKS ✼ DATA & MISC ✼ DEFERRED OBJECT
VISUAL CHEAT SHEET
= NEW OR CHANGED IN jQUERY 1.7 / f(x) = FUNCTION / a = ARRAY / jQ = jQUERY / El = ELEMENT / 0-1 = BOOLEAN / Obj = OBJECT / NUM = NUMBER / Str = STRING
❉ MANIPULATION .hasClass( className ) Str .remove( [selector] ) Str .val() Str
Determine whether any of the matched elements are Remove the set of matched elements from the DOM. Get the current value of the first element in the set of N
.addClass() jQ assigned the given class. matched elements. a()
Adds the specified class(es) to each of the set of matched .removeAttr( attributeName ) jQ .val( value ) - .val( function(index, value) ) jQ
.html() Str
elements. Remove an attribute from each element in the set of
Get the HTML contents of the first element in the set of jQ matched elements.
.addClass( className ) - .addClass( function(index,
matched elements. .width() Int
currentClass) )
.html( htmlString ) - .html( function(index, oldhtml) ) Get the current computed width for the first element in
.removeClass() jQ
the set of matched elements.
.after() jQ
.innerHeight() Int Remove a single class, multiple classes, or all classes from .width( value ) - .width( function(index, width) )
Insert content, specified by the parameter, after each each element in the set of matched elements.
element in the set of matched elements. Get the current computed height for the first element in
.removeClass( [className] )
the set of matched elements, including padding but not .wrap() jQ
.after( content [, content] ) - .after( function(index) ) .removeClass( function(index, class) )
border.
Wrap an HTML structure around each element in the set
.append() jQ .innerWidth() Int .removeProp( propertyName ) jQ of matched elements.
.wrap( wrappingElement ) - .wrap( function(index) )
Insert content, specified by the parameter, to the end of Get the current computed width for the first element in Remove a property for the set of matched elements.
each element in the set of matched elements. the set of matched elements, including padding but not
border.
.append( content [, content] ) .replaceAll( target ) jQ .wrapAll( wrappingElement ) jQ
.append( function(index, html) )
.insertAfter( target ) Int Replace each target element with the set of matched Wrap an HTML structure around all elements in the set of
elements. matched elements.
.appendTo( target ) jQ Insert every element in the set of matched elements after
the target.
Insert every element in the set of matched elements to the .replaceWith() jQ .wrapInner() jQ
end of the target.
.insertBefore( target ) Int Replace each element in the set of matched elements with Wrap an HTML structure around the content of each
the provided new content. element in the set of matched elements.
.attr() jQ Insert every element in the set of matched elements before
the target. .replaceWith( newContent ) - .replaceWith( function ) .wrapInner( wrappingElement )
Get the value of an attribute for the first element in the set .wrapInner( function(index) )
of matched elements.
.offset() Int
.scrollLeft() jQ
.attr( attributeName ) - .attr( attributeName, value )
Get the current coordinates of the first element in the set
Get the current horizontal position of the scroll bar for the
of matched elements, relative to the document.
first element in the set of matched elements. ❉ CSS
.before() jQ .offset( coordinates ) - .offset( function(index, coords) )
.scrollLeft( value )
Insert content, specified by the parameter, before each
element in the set of matched elements. .outerHeight( [includeMargin] ) Int .addClass() jQ
.scrollTop() jQ
.before( content [, content] ) - .before( function ) Get the current computed height for the first element in Adds the specified class(es) to each of the set of matched
the set of matched elements, including padding, border, Get the current vertical position of the scroll bar for the elements.
and optionally margin. Returns an integer (without "px") first element in the set of matched elements.
.clone() jQ .addClass( className ) - .addClass( function(index,
representation of the value or null if called on an empty currentClass) )
.scrollTop value )
Create a deep copy of the set of matched elements. set of elements.
.clone( [withDataAndEvents] )
.clone( [withDataAndEvents] [,deepWithDataAndEvents] ) .position() Obj .text() jQ .css() Str
Get the current coordinates of the first element in the set Get the combined text contents of each element in the set Get the value of a style property for the first element in jQ
.css() Str of matched elements, relative to the offset parent. of matched elements, including their descendants. the set of matched elements.
jQ .text( textString ) - .text( function(index, text) ) .css( propertyName ) - .css( propertyName, value )
Get the value of a style property for the first element in
the set of matched elements.
.prepend( content [, content] ) jQ .css( propertyName, function(index, value) )
.css( map )
.css( propertyName ) - .css( propertyName, value ) Insert content, specified by the parameter, to the .toggleClass() jQ
.css( propertyName, function(index, value) ) beginning of each element in the set of matched elements.
Add or remove one or more classes from each element in
.css( map ) jQuery.cssHooks Obj
the set of matched elements, depending on either the
.prependTo( target ) jQ class's presence or the value of the switch argument.
Hook directly into jQuery to override how particular CSS
.detach( [selector] ) jQ Insert every element in the set of matched elements to the .toggleClass( className ) properties are retrieved or set, normalize CSS property
beginning of the target. .toggleClass( className, switch ) naming, or create custom properties.
Remove the set of matched elements from the DOM.
.prop() Str
.empty() jQ .unwrap() jQ .hasClass( className ) Str
Get the value of a property for the first element in the set jQ
Remove all child nodes of the set of matched elements of matched elements. Remove the parents of the set of matched elements from Determine whether any of the matched elements are
from the DOM. the DOM, leaving the matched elements in their place. assigned the given class.
.prop( propertyName ) - .prop( propertyName, value )
4. jQUERY 1.7 CORE ✼ SELECTORS ✼ ATTRIBUTES ✼ TRAVERSING ✼ MANIPULATION ✼ CSS ✼ EVENTS
EFFECTS ✼ AJAX ✼ UTILITIES ✼ CALLBACKS ✼ DATA & MISC ✼ DEFERRED OBJECT
VISUAL CHEAT SHEET
= NEW OR CHANGED IN jQUERY 1.7 / f(x) = FUNCTION / a = ARRAY / jQ = jQUERY / El = ELEMENT / 0-1 = BOOLEAN / Obj = OBJECT / NUM = NUMBER / Str = STRING
.height() Int .toggleClass() jQ .die() jQ event.result Obj
Get the current computed height for the first element in Add or remove one or more classes from each element in Remove all event handlers previously attached The last value returned by an event handler that was
the set of matched elements. the set of matched elements, depending on either the using .live() from the elements. triggered by this event, unless the value was undefined.
class's presence or the value of the switch argument.
.height( value ) .die( eventType [, handler] )
.height( function(index, height) ) .toggleClass( className ) .die( eventTypes ) event.stopImmediatePropagation()
.toggleClass( className, switch )
Prevents other event handlers from being called.
.innerHeight() Int .error() jQ
.width() Int
Get the current computed height for the first element in Bind an event handler to the "error" JavaScript event.
event.stopPropagation()
the set of matched elements, including padding but not Get the current computed width for the first element in
.error( handler(eventObject) )
border. the set of matched elements. Prevents the event from bubbling up the DOM tree,
.error( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.width( value ) - .width( function(index, width) ) preventing any parent handlers from being notified of the
event.
.innerWidth() Int event.currentTarget jQ
Get the current computed width for the first element in The current DOM element within the event bubbling
the set of matched elements, including padding but not event.target el
phase.
border. ❉ EVENTS The DOM element that initiated the event.
event.data Any
.offset() Int .bind() jQ event.timeStamp N
The optional data passed to jQuery.fn.bind when the
Get the current coordinates of the first element in the set Attach a handler to an event for the elements. current executing handler was bound. The difference in milliseconds between the time the
of matched elements, relative to the document. browser created the event and January 1, 1970.
.bind( eventType [, eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.offset( coordinates ) - .offset( function(index, coords) ) .bind( eventType [, eventData], preventBubble ) event.delegateTarget el
.bind( events )
event.type Str
The element where the currently-called jQuery event
.outerHeight( [includeMargin] ) Int
handler was attached.
.blur() jQ Describes the nature of the event.
Get the current computed height for the first element in
the set of matched elements, including padding, border, Bind an event handler to the "blur" JavaScript event, or event.isDefaultPrevented() 0-1
and optionally margin. Returns an integer (without "px") trigger that event on an element. event.which N
representation of the value or null if called on an empty Returns whether event.preventDefault() was ever called
.blur( handler(eventObject) ) For key or button events, this attribute indicates the
set of elements. on this event object.
.blur( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) specific button or key that was pressed.
.outerWidth( [includeMargin] ) Int event.isImmediatePropagationStopped() 0-1
.change() jQ .focus() jQ
Get the current computed width for the first element in Returns whether event.stopImmediatePropagation() was
Bind an event handler to the "change" JavaScript event, ever called on this event object. Bind an event handler to the "focus" JavaScript event, or
the set of matched elements, including padding and or trigger that event on an element. trigger that event on an element
border.
.change( handler(eventObject) ) .focus( handler(eventObject) )
event.isPropagationStopped() 0-1
.change( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .focus( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.position() Obj Returns whether event.stopPropagation() was ever called
Get the current coordinates of the first element in the set on this event object.
.click() jQ
of matched elements, relative to the offset parent. .focusin() jQ
Bind an event handler to the "click" JavaScript event, or event.namespace Str
trigger that event on an element. Bind an event handler to the "focusin" event.
.removeClass() jQ The namespace specified when the event was triggered. .focusin( handler(eventObject) )
.click( handler(eventObject) )
.click( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .focusin( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
Remove a single class, multiple classes, or all classes from
each element in the set of matched elements. event.pageX N
.removeClass( [className] ) .dblclick() jQ The mouse position relative to the left edge of the .focusout() jQ
.removeClass( function(index, class) ) document.
Bind an event handler to the "dblclick" JavaScript event, Bind an event handler to the "focusout" JavaScript event.
or trigger that event on an element.
event.pageY .focusout( handler(eventObject) )
.scrollLeft() Int N
.focusout( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.dblclick( handler(eventObject) )
Get the current horizontal position of the scroll bar for the .dblclick( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) The mouse position relative to the top edge of the
first element in the set of matched elements. document.
.hover() jQ
.scrollLeft( value ) .delegate() jQ
event.preventDefault() u Bind two handlers to the matched elements, to be
Attach a handler to one or more events for all elements executed when the mouse pointer enters and leaves the
.scrollTop() Int that match the selector, now or in the future, based on a If this method is called, the default action of the event will elements.
specific set of root elements. not be triggered.
Get the current vertical position of the scroll bar for the .hover( handlerIn(eventObject)
first element in the set of matched elements. .delegate( selector, eventType, handler ) .handlerOut(eventObject) )
.delegate( selector, eventType, eventData, handler ) event.relatedTarget el .hover( handlerInOut(eventObject) )
.scrollTop( value ) .delegate( selector, events )
The other DOM element involved in the event, if any.
5. jQUERY 1.7 CORE ✼ SELECTORS ✼ ATTRIBUTES ✼ TRAVERSING ✼ MANIPULATION ✼ CSS ✼ EVENTS
EFFECTS ✼ AJAX ✼ UTILITIES ✼ CALLBACKS ✼ DATA & MISC ✼ DEFERRED OBJECT
VISUAL CHEAT SHEET
= NEW OR CHANGED IN jQUERY 1.7 / f(x) = FUNCTION / a = ARRAY / jQ = jQUERY / El = ELEMENT / 0-1 = BOOLEAN / Obj = OBJECT / NUM = NUMBER / Str = STRING
.keydown() jQ .mouseout() jQ .scroll() jQ .undelegate() jQ
Bind an event handler to the "keydown" JavaScript event, Bind an event handler to the "mouseout" JavaScript Bind an event handler to the "scroll" JavaScript event, or Remove a handler from the event for all elements which
or trigger that event on an element. event, or trigger that event on an element. trigger that event on an element. match the current selector, based upon a specific set of
root elements.
.keydown( handler(eventObject) ) .mouseout( handler(eventObject) ) .scroll( handler(eventObject) )
.keydown( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .mouseout( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .scroll( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .undelegate( selector, eventType )
.undelegate( selector, eventType, handler )
.undelegate( selector, events )
.keypress() jQ .mouseover() jQ .undelegate( namespace )
.select() jQ
Bind an event handler to the "keypress" JavaScript event, Get the current computed width for the first element in
or trigger that event on an element. Bind an event handler to the "select" JavaScript event, or .unload() jQ
the set of matched elements.
trigger that event on an element.
.keypress( handler(eventObject) ) .mouseover( handler(eventObject) ) Bind an event handler to the "unload" JavaScript event.
.keypress( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .select( handler(eventObject) )
.mouseover( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.select( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .unload( handler(eventObject) )
.unload( [eventData], handler(eventObject) )
.keyup() jQ .mouseup() jQ
Bind an event handler to the "keyup" JavaScript event, or .submit() jQ
Bind an event handler to the "mouseup" JavaScript event,
trigger that event on an element. or trigger that event on an element. Bind an event handler to the "submit" JavaScript event,
.keyup( handler(eventObject) ) or trigger that event on an element. ❉ EFFECTS
.mouseup( handler(eventObject) )
.keyup( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .mouseup( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .submit( handler(eventObject) )
.submit( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .animate() jQ
.live() jQ Perform a custom animation of a set of CSS properties.
.off() jQ
Attach an event handler for all elements which match the .animate( properties [, duration] [, easing] [, complete] )
.toggle() jQ
current selector, now and in the future. Remove an event handler. .animate( properties, options )
.live( events, handler ) - .live( events, data, handler ) Bind two or more handlers to the matched elements, to be
.off( events [, selector] [, handler] )
executed on alternate clicks.
.live( events-map ) .off( events-map [, selector] ) .clearQueue( [queueName] ) jQ
handler(eventObject), handler(eventObject) [,
handler(eventObject)] Remove from the queue all items that have not yet been
.load() jQ .on() jQ run.
Bind an event handler to the "load" JavaScript event.
Bind an event handler to the "click" JavaScript event, or .delay( duration [, queueName] ) jQ
.load( handler(eventObject) ) trigger that event on an element. .trigger() jQ
.load( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) Execute all handlers and behaviors attached to the Set a timer to delay execution of subsequent items in the
.on( events [, selector] [, data], handler ) queue.
.on( events-map [, selector] [, data] ) matched elements for the given event type.
.mousedown() jQ .trigger( eventType, extraParameters )
.dequeue( [queueName] ) jQ
.one() jQ .trigger( event )
Bind an event handler to the "mousedown" JavaScript
event, or trigger that event on an element. Execute the next function on the queue for the matched
Attach a handler to an event for the elements. The elements.
.mousedown( handler(eventObject) ) handler is executed at most once per element.
.triggerHandler() jQ
.mousedown( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .one( events [, data], handler ) .fadeIn() jQ
.one( events [, selector] [, data], handler ) Execute all handlers attached to an element for an event.
.one( events-map [, selector] [, data] ) Display the matched elements by fading them to opaque.
.mouseenter() jQ .triggerHandler( eventType, extraParameters )
.fadeIn( [duration] [, callback] )
Bind an event handler to be fired when the mouse enters .fadeIn( [duration] [, easing] [, callback] )
an element, or trigger that handler on an element. jQuery.proxy() jQ
.unbind() jQ
.mouseenter( handler(eventObject) ) Takes a function and returns a new one that will always .fadeOut() jQ
.mouseenter( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) Remove a previously-attached event handler from the
have a particular context.
elements.
Hide the matched elements by fading them to
jQuery.proxy( function, context ) transparent.
.unbind( [eventType] [, handler(eventObject)] )
.mouseleave() jQ jQuery.proxy( context, name )
.unbind( eventType, false )
.fadeOut( [duration] [, callback] )
Bind an event handler to be fired when the mouse leaves .fadeOut( [duration] [, easing] [, callback] )
an element, or trigger that handler on an element. .ready( handler ) jQ
.mouseleave( handler(eventObject) .undelegate() jQ .fadeTo() jQ
Specify a function to execute when the DOM is fully
.mouseleave( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) loaded. Remove a handler from the event for all elements which Adjust the opacity of the matched elements.
match the current selector, based upon a specific set of
root elements. .fadeTo( duration, opacity [, callback] )
.mousemove() jQ .resize() jQ .fadeTo( duration, opacity [, easing] [, callback] )
.undelegate( selector, eventType )
Bind an event handler to the "mousemove" JavaScript Bind an event handler to the "resize" JavaScript event, or .undelegate( selector, eventType, handler )
event, or trigger that event on an element. trigger that event on an element. .undelegate( selector, events ) .fadeToggle( [duration] [, easing] [, jQ
.mousemove( handler(eventObject) ) .resize( handler(eventObject) )
.undelegate( namespace ) callback] )
.mousemove( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) .resize( [eventData], handler(eventObject) ) Display or hide the matched elements by animating their
opacity.