javascript – Window.onload vs document.ready ? – Stack Overflow

The ready event occurs after the HTML document has been loaded, while the onload event occurs later, when all content (e.g. images) also has been loaded.

The onload event is a standard event in the DOM, while the ready event is specific to jQuery. The purpose of the ready event is that it should occur as early as possible after the document has loaded, so that code that adds funcionality to the elements in the page doesn’t have to wait for all content to load.

via javascript – Window.onload vs document.ready ? – Stack Overflow.

Simple jQuery loader image function – attached to all ajax and form posts

So I needed a simple ajax loader box indicating when there was a ajax request going on in the page.

Fortunately jquery ajax have global events you can attach to enable this behavior.

Code:
Html at the end of masterpage perhaps (before </body>):

	    <div id="loadingbox">
            <img src="../../Assets/Images/Loadingbox/ajax-loader-big.gif" alt="Loading..."/>
	    </div>

Ajax loader images can be found here: http://ajaxload.info/

Javascript:

//Generic loader image function. 
//Attached to global jquery ajax calls and form posts.

$(document).bind("ajaxStart", function () {
    $("#loadingbox").show();
});

$(document).bind("ajaxComplete", function () {
    $("#loadingbox").hide();
});

$(document).bind("ajaxError", function () {
    $("#loadingbox").hide();
});

$(document).submit(function () {
    $("#loadingbox").show();
});

The 3 first functions is attached to global ajax events. They are per default always raised by jquery ajax functions. More info: http://api.jquery.com/category/ajax/global-ajax-event-handlers/

The last function attaches to all form posts. (E.g. not ajax but might still be good to have).

Further extension would be to add more click event handlers. E.g. on certain a-elements perhaps. A problem though: if a user clicks a link the request will happen before the js. Therefore you must use e.preventDefault() and then show the loader. After that need to redirect the user to the desired url.

Add a script element for the js file in masterpage <head>:

<script src="/Assets/Scripts/loadingbox.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

Css:

#loadingbox {
    display: none;
    position: fixed;
    top: 50%;
    left: 50%;
    z-index: 99999;
    background-color: #fff;
    opacity: 0.9;
    border: 1px solid black;
    border-radius: 5px;
    padding: 25px;
    margin-left: -41px;
    margin-top: -41px;
}

Initially on every page load the loading box will be hidden. (Display: none).

Position fixed is needed so that the loaderbox always be placed in an fixed location relative to the browser window. Also enables the ability to let the box appear above the other html elements. (a high z-index).

Its then placed in the middle, vertically and horisontally: top: 50% and left: 50%.

A little opacity is added, a thin black border and rounded corners (radius). Padding adds white space between the image and the black border.

The negative margins is used to place the loader box in perfect center. Everything in css is placed according to topleft corner of the window as a startingpoint. The box is 82px wide (image is 32px wide and padding on both side is 50px (25+25px padding)).

This means the loadingbox and image will be slightly tilted to right and below the perfect center lines. We adjust this by setting negative margin to half the width and height of the box. (-41px respectively).

Chrome Web Store – Visual Event – Show jQuery event listening code

Ever want to know which line of javascript code that is listening to a certain event on an element? Even when working with jQuery?

This tool for Chrome is really sweet!
Chrome Web Store – Visual Event.

However its seems to be native functionality in Chrome already?
See Paul Irish posting here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/google-chrome-developer-tools/NTcIS15uigA

Didnt get it to work in my Chrome browser although. (just like the latest posts in above forum – just shows jquery source code)

jQuery plugin: Tablesorter 2.0

tablesorter is a jQuery plugin for turning a standard HTML table with THEAD and TBODY tags into a sortable table without page refreshes. tablesorter can successfully parse and sort many types of data including linked data in a cell. It has many useful features including:

Multi-column sorting

Parsers for sorting text, URIs, integers, currency, floats, IP addresses, dates (ISO, long and short formats), time. Add your own easily

Support secondary “hidden” sorting (e.g., maintain alphabetical sort when sorting on other criteria)

Extensibility via widget system

Cross-browser: IE 6.0+, FF 2+, Safari 2.0+, Opera 9.0+

Small code size

via jQuery plugin: Tablesorter 2.0.