Thursday, March 10, 2016

Philter : A JS plugin for CSS Filters

Philter is an open source JavaScript plugin that allows you to control CSS filters through HTML attributes counting on hover event triggered effects.

The post Philter : A JS plugin for CSS Filters appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

Bootstrap HTML Builder with PHP & jQuery

Bootstrap HTML Builder is a tool that help to create the Bootstrap html file by drag and drop, it helps create html files faster that will save you tons of time working. Build any HTML file you can imagine.

  • Unlimited html projects and files
  • Create, edit, download, delete html project
  • Design html file with drag and drop component elements
  • Support test environment for desktop, tablet, mobile
  • Support bootstrap theme
  • 17 bootstrap themes is included

The post Bootstrap HTML Builder with PHP & jQuery appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

JavaScript Sticky Elements to Your Mouse

Sticky Elements allows you to stickiness add to your website elements; which, in this case, means that when you hover over them, they get stuck to your cursor and then spring back after set limits.

The post JavaScript Sticky Elements to Your Mouse appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

How to Use Periscope to Build Your Personal Brand - #infographic


If you are interested in building a personal brand, getting active on periscope might be just what you need to get started. Periscope is a tool that you can use to create live broadcasts using your smartphone. Not only that, your followers can also join you to follow you, and to use your broadcasts as a way to broadcast to their followers as well. You can also view broadcasts from other Periscope users in real-time, or view recent broadcasts. This is the perfect tool for bringing people into your world in a way that is truly authentic. Isn’t that how you want to build your personal brand? Yes! Then let’s get started. Here are 12 important things to know about using Periscope as a tool for building your personal brand.

by Guest Author via Digital Information World

Ask the UXperts: How to harness emotion to create meaningful products — with Edie Adams.

The human brain is tuned to perceive emotions.

In fact, this tuning is so ingrained that we don’t even require other people to perceive them! We perceive the expression of emotion and personality in things in our environment, including products, interfaces and websites.

— from designforemotion.com

 

Learning to harness these emotional connections that people make with products can be a powerful tool when designing. Understanding emotional engagement can help to inform design decisions and differentiate our work from that of others.

Design for Emotion (book)Edie Adams literally wrote the book on designing for emotion. Design for Emotion (co-written with Trevor van Gorp) is a guide to understanding and applying emotion and personality to create products, applications and websites that are more desirable, usable and useful.

Edie currently holds the position of Principal Ergonomist in the Devices Design Team at Microsoft. She first joined Microsoft in 1994, and has held numerous ergonomics, user research and Design/UX Manager roles.  Her innovations have been recognized with over 80 US  and  international patents.

Her design work is included in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and The Chicago Antheneum and has been recognized by IDEA and Red Dot awards. She is the co-author of a book targeted to design practitioners, Design for Emotion, published July, 2012, by Morgan Kaufman. A Chinese language edition was published in 2014.

Join us in our next Ask the UXperts session to chat with Edie about how we people develop emotional connections to products and how we can harness that as designers, to inform our choices. The sessions run for approximately an hour and best of all, they don’t cost a cent. They are text based so there is no audio or video, but a full transcript will be posted up on here in the days following the session.

 

The post Ask the UXperts: How to harness emotion to create meaningful products — with Edie Adams. appeared first on UX Mastery.


by Sarah Hawk via UX Mastery

Spring Loaders with Rebound and Canvas

A tutorial on how to create a loading spinner made with inscribed polygons and animated with Rebound spring motion.


by via jQuery-Plugins.net RSS Feed

14 jQuery Modal Dialog Boxes

A great way to show quick information to your user is to use jQuery modal dialog boxes or windows. Dialog boxes can also be used to alert them to warnings, errors and more. If done correctly, good looking dialogs can be an easy way to make your site feel more modern without a lot of extra work.

Many frameworks, such as Twitter Bootstrap or Zurb Foundation, will include modals and dialogs. However, if all you want is a great looking, easy to use modal window without rolling your own from scratch, there are plenty of libraries out there to help you.

[author_more]

Here are some Modal Dialog Boxes for you, enjoy!

Update 12 Dec 2013: Updated all plugins in this post and added new images of demos. Removed missing plugins and added new ones. There are now 18 decent ones.

Update 10 March 2016: The list of plugins have been completely updated and refreshed. If you're not already using jQuery, skip to the bonus section for JavaScript libraries that don't require it!

1. vex

Easily styled, highly configurable, and mobile ready, vex is a pleasure to use. Start using vex on your projects as simply a drop-in replacement, without conflicting with other libraries or plugins you may have installed. Give your site that modern look.

vex example

Homepage/Demo | Github

2. Sweet Alert

Sweet Alert may not be the most lightweight modal on our list at 17kb, but it is the most popular. However, it does not need jQuery. If your site is small and the only reason you're considering jQuery is to add a dialog, 17kb is much smaller than the entire jQuery library which can be hundreds of kilobytes. Sweet Alert also looks really great.

Sweet Alert example

Homepage/Demo | Github

3. Remodal

Sweet Alert may not be the most lightweight modal on our list at 17kb, but it is the most popular. However, it does not need jQuery. If your site is small and the only reason you're considering jQuery is to add a dialog, 17kb is much smaller than the entire jQuery library which can be hundreds of kilobytes. Sweet Alert also looks really great.

Remodal example

Homepage/Demo | Github

4. Avgrund Modal

Looking for something a little different? Avgrund may have you covered. The default settings create a unique effect that not only adds animations to the modal, but to the page itself, elegantly creating an illusion of depth. The best way to see how it looks is to check out the Demo in the links below for yourself.

Avgrund Modal Example

Homepage/Demo | Github

Continue reading %14 jQuery Modal Dialog Boxes%


by Matt Burnett via SitePoint