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jQuery

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jQuery
Developer(s)jQuery Team
Stable release
1.4.2 / February 19, 2010 (2010-02-19)
Repository
Written inJavaScript
TypeWeb application framework
LicenseDual license:
GPL and MIT
Websitehttp://jquery.com/

jQuery is a lightweight cross-browser JavaScript library that emphasizes interaction between JavaScript and HTML. It was released in January 2006 at BarCamp NYC by John Resig. Used by over 27% of the 10,000 most visited websites, jQuery is the most popular JavaScript library in use today.[1]

jQuery is free, open source software, dual-licensed under the MIT License and the GNU General Public License, Version 2.[2] jQuery's syntax is designed to make it easier to navigate a document, select DOM elements, create animations, handle events, and develop Ajax applications. jQuery also provides capabilities for developers to create plugins on top of the JavaScript library. Providing this option, developers are able to create abstractions for low-level interaction and animation, advanced effects and high-level, theme-able widgets. This contributes to the creation of powerful and dynamic web pages.

Microsoft and Nokia have announced plans to bundle jQuery on their platforms,[3] Microsoft adopting it initially within Visual Studio[4] for use within Microsoft's ASP.NET AJAX framework and ASP.NET MVC Framework whilst Nokia has integrated it into their Web Run-Time widget development platform.[5]

The Seaside framework provides full integration of jQuery allowing to write web applications entirely in Smalltalk.

Features

jQuery contains the following features:

  • DOM element selections using the cross-browser open source selector engine Sizzle, a spin-off out of the jQuery project[6]
  • DOM traversal and modification (including support for CSS 1-3)
  • Events
  • CSS manipulation
  • Effects and animations
  • Ajax
  • Extensibility through plugins
  • Utilities - such as browser version and the each function.

Use

The jQuery library is usually a single JavaScript file, containing all its common DOM, event, effects, and Ajax functions. It can be included within a web page using the following mark-up:

<script type="text/javascript" src="jQuery.js"></script>

jQuery can also be loaded using the Google AJAX Libraries API with the following mark-up[7]:

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script>
google.load("jquery", "1.3.2");
</script>

Microsoft hosts jQuery on its AJAX CDN (Content delivery network) making it easy to add the support for jQuery library. CDN serves JavaScript libraries from one of thousands of geo-located Microsoft edge-cache servers around the world.

<script src="http://ajax.microsoft.com/ajax/jquery/jquery-1.4.1.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

jQuery has two usage styles:

  • via the $ function, which is a factory method for the jQuery object. These functions, often called commands, are chainable; they each return a jQuery object
  • via $.-prefixed functions. These are utility functions which do not work on the jQuery object per se.

Typically, access to and manipulation of multiple DOM nodes begins with the $ function being called with a CSS selector string, which results in a jQuery object referencing zero or more elements in the HTML page. This node set can be manipulated by calling instance methods on the jQuery object, or on the nodes themselves. For example:

$("div.test").add("p.quote").addClass("blue").slideDown("slow");

This line finds the union of all div tags with class attribute test and all p tags with CSS class attribute quote, adds the class attribute blue to each matched element, and then slides them down with an animation. The $ and add functions affect the matched set, while the addClass and slideDown affect the referenced nodes.

The methods prefixed with $. are convenience methods or affect global properties and behaviour. For example, the following is an example of the map function called each in jQuery:

$.each([1,2,3], function() {
  document.write(this + 1);
});

This writes the numbers 234 to the document.

It is possible to perform browser-independent Ajax queries using $.ajax and associated methods to load and manipulate remote data.

$.ajax({
  type: "POST",
  url: "some.php",
  data: "name=John&location=Boston",
  success: function(msg){
    alert( "Data Saved: " + msg );
  }
});

This example posts the data name=John and location=Boston to some.php on the server. When this request finishes successfully, the success function is called to alert the user.

Release history

Release date Version number Additional notes
August 26, 2006 1.0 First Stable Release
August 31, 2006 1.0.1
October 9, 2006 1.0.2
October 27, 2006 1.0.3
December 12, 2006 1.0.4 Last 1.0 bug fix
January 14, 2007 1.1
January 22, 2007 1.1.1
February 27, 2007 1.1.2
July 1, 2007 1.1.3
July 5, 2007 1.1.3.1
August 24, 2007 1.1.4
September 10, 2007 1.2
September 16, 2007 1.2.1
January 15, 2008 1.2.2
February 8, 2008 1.2.3
May 19, 2008 1.2.4
May 21, 2008 1.2.5 Fix for bad build of 1.2.4
May 24, 2008 1.2.6
January 14, 2009 1.3 Sizzle Selector Engine introduced into core
January 21, 2009 1.3.1
February 20, 2009 1.3.2
January 14, 2010 1.4
January 25, 2010 1.4.1
February 19, 2010 1.4.2

See also

Template:Fossportal

Notes

  1. ^ "jQuery Usage Statistics".
  2. ^ "License – JQuery JavaScript Library". Retrieved 2009-11-26.
  3. ^ Resig, John (2008-09-28). "jQuery, Microsoft, and Nokia". jQuery Blog. jQuery. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  4. ^ Guthrie, Scott (2008-09-28). "jQuery and Microsoft". ScottGu's Blog. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  5. ^ "Guarana UI: A jQuery Based UI Library for Nokia WRT". Forum Nokia. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  6. ^ Resig, John (2009-01-14). "jQuery 1.3 and the jQuery Foundation". jQuery Blog. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  7. ^ http://code.google.com/apis/ajaxlibs/documentation/#jquery

References

Bibliography

External links