Listen "Fun with Overflows - Part 1"
Episode Synopsis
Making use of the overflow and scrollLeft DOM property to scroll elements is a much more effective use of the CPU, over animating using CSS top/left. So this episode of J4D demonstrates the same effect used in two completely different ways.
The first is a scrollable timeline. A couple of readers requested a demo of how Plurk's browse timeline works. In addition, in the last month, Google released a 10 year timeline - so I wanted to show how this works.
The first is a scrollable timeline. A couple of readers requested a demo of how Plurk's browse timeline works. In addition, in the last month, Google released a 10 year timeline - so I wanted to show how this works.
More episodes of the podcast jQuery for Designers - screencasts and tutorials
Populate Select Boxes
11/02/2011
Scroll Linked Navigation
18/08/2010
Debugging Tools
13/07/2010
Enabling the Back Button
19/04/2010
Adding Keyboard Navigation
12/01/2010
Fixed Floating Elements
23/10/2009
iPhone-like Sliding Headers
10/09/2009
Automatic Infinite Carousel
13/08/2009
Play School: Broken Repeating Animations
24/07/2009
API: queue and dequeue
10/07/2009
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