/* * jQuery Mobile Framework 1.1.1 1981b3f5ec22675ae47df8f0bdf9622e7780e90e * http://jquerymobile.com * * Copyright 2012 jQuery Foundation and other contributors * Dual licensed under the MIT or GPL Version 2 licenses. * http://jquery.org/license * */ (function ( root, doc, factory ) { if ( typeof define === "function" && define.amd ) { // AMD. Register as an anonymous module. define( [ "jquery" ], function ( $ ) { factory( $, root, doc ); return $.mobile; }); } else { // Browser globals factory( root.jQuery, root, doc ); } }( this, document, function ( jQuery, window, document, undefined ) { // This plugin is an experiment for abstracting away the touch and mouse // events so that developers don't have to worry about which method of input // the device their document is loaded on supports. // // The idea here is to allow the developer to register listeners for the // basic mouse events, such as mousedown, mousemove, mouseup, and click, // and the plugin will take care of registering the correct listeners // behind the scenes to invoke the listener at the fastest possible time // for that device, while still retaining the order of event firing in // the traditional mouse environment, should multiple handlers be registered // on the same element for different events. // // The current version exposes the following virtual events to jQuery bind methods: // "vmouseover vmousedown vmousemove vmouseup vclick vmouseout vmousecancel" (function( $, window, document, undefined ) { var dataPropertyName = "virtualMouseBindings", touchTargetPropertyName = "virtualTouchID", virtualEventNames = "vmouseover vmousedown vmousemove vmouseup vclick vmouseout vmousecancel".split( " " ), touchEventProps = "clientX clientY pageX pageY screenX screenY".split( " " ), mouseHookProps = $.event.mouseHooks ? $.event.mouseHooks.props : [], mouseEventProps = $.event.props.concat( mouseHookProps ), activeDocHandlers = {}, resetTimerID = 0, startX = 0, startY = 0, didScroll = false, clickBlockList = [], blockMouseTriggers = false, blockTouchTriggers = false, eventCaptureSupported = "addEventListener" in document, $document = $( document ), nextTouchID = 1, lastTouchID = 0; $.vmouse = { moveDistanceThreshold: 10, clickDistanceThreshold: 10, resetTimerDuration: 1500 }; function getNativeEvent( event ) { while ( event && typeof event.originalEvent !== "undefined" ) { event = event.originalEvent; } return event; } function createVirtualEvent( event, eventType ) { var t = event.type, oe, props, ne, prop, ct, touch, i, j; event = $.Event(event); event.type = eventType; oe = event.originalEvent; props = $.event.props; // addresses separation of $.event.props in to $.event.mouseHook.props and Issue 3280 // https://github.com/jquery/jquery-mobile/issues/3280 if ( t.search( /^(mouse|click)/ ) > -1 ) { props = mouseEventProps; } // copy original event properties over to the new event // this would happen if we could call $.event.fix instead of $.Event // but we don't have a way to force an event to be fixed multiple times if ( oe ) { for ( i = props.length, prop; i; ) { prop = props[ --i ]; event[ prop ] = oe[ prop ]; } } // make sure that if the mouse and click virtual events are generated // without a .which one is defined if ( t.search(/mouse(down|up)|click/) > -1 && !event.which ){ event.which = 1; } if ( t.search(/^touch/) !== -1 ) { ne = getNativeEvent( oe ); t = ne.touches; ct = ne.changedTouches; touch = ( t && t.length ) ? t[0] : ( (ct && ct.length) ? ct[ 0 ] : undefined ); if ( touch ) { for ( j = 0, len = touchEventProps.length; j < len; j++){ prop = touchEventProps[ j ]; event[ prop ] = touch[ prop ]; } } } return event; } function getVirtualBindingFlags( element ) { var flags = {}, b, k; while ( element ) { b = $.data( element, dataPropertyName ); for ( k in b ) { if ( b[ k ] ) { flags[ k ] = flags.hasVirtualBinding = true; } } element = element.parentNode; } return flags; } function getClosestElementWithVirtualBinding( element, eventType ) { var b; while ( element ) { b = $.data( element, dataPropertyName ); if ( b && ( !eventType || b[ eventType ] ) ) { return element; } element = element.parentNode; } return null; } function enableTouchBindings() { blockTouchTriggers = false; } function disableTouchBindings() { blockTouchTriggers = true; } function enableMouseBindings() { lastTouchID = 0; clickBlockList.length = 0; blockMouseTriggers = false; // When mouse bindings are enabled, our // touch bindings are disabled. disableTouchBindings(); } function disableMouseBindings() { // When mouse bindings are disabled, our // touch bindings are enabled. enableTouchBindings(); } function startResetTimer() { clearResetTimer(); resetTimerID = setTimeout(function(){ resetTimerID = 0; enableMouseBindings(); }, $.vmouse.resetTimerDuration ); } function clearResetTimer() { if ( resetTimerID ){ clearTimeout( resetTimerID ); resetTimerID = 0; } } function triggerVirtualEvent( eventType, event, flags ) { var ve; if ( ( flags && flags[ eventType ] ) || ( !flags && getClosestElementWithVirtualBinding( event.target, eventType ) ) ) { ve = createVirtualEvent( event, eventType ); $( event.target).trigger( ve ); } return ve; } function mouseEventCallback( event ) { var touchID = $.data(event.target, touchTargetPropertyName); if ( !blockMouseTriggers && ( !lastTouchID || lastTouchID !== touchID ) ){ var ve = triggerVirtualEvent( "v" + event.type, event ); if ( ve ) { if ( ve.isDefaultPrevented() ) { event.preventDefault(); } if ( ve.isPropagationStopped() ) { event.stopPropagation(); } if ( ve.isImmediatePropagationStopped() ) { event.stopImmediatePropagation(); } } } } function handleTouchStart( event ) { var touches = getNativeEvent( event ).touches, target, flags; if ( touches && touches.length === 1 ) { target = event.target; flags = getVirtualBindingFlags( target ); if ( flags.hasVirtualBinding ) { lastTouchID = nextTouchID++; $.data( target, touchTargetPropertyName, lastTouchID ); clearResetTimer(); disableMouseBindings(); didScroll = false; var t = getNativeEvent( event ).touches[ 0 ]; startX = t.pageX; startY = t.pageY; triggerVirtualEvent( "vmouseover", event, flags ); triggerVirtualEvent( "vmousedown", event, flags ); } } } function handleScroll( event ) { if ( blockTouchTriggers ) { return; } if ( !didScroll ) { triggerVirtualEvent( "vmousecancel", event, getVirtualBindingFlags( event.target ) ); } didScroll = true; startResetTimer(); } function handleTouchMove( event ) { if ( blockTouchTriggers ) { return; } var t = getNativeEvent( event ).touches[ 0 ], didCancel = didScroll, moveThreshold = $.vmouse.moveDistanceThreshold; didScroll = didScroll || ( Math.abs(t.pageX - startX) > moveThreshold || Math.abs(t.pageY - startY) > moveThreshold ), flags = getVirtualBindingFlags( event.target ); if ( didScroll && !didCancel ) { triggerVirtualEvent( "vmousecancel", event, flags ); } triggerVirtualEvent( "vmousemove", event, flags ); startResetTimer(); } function handleTouchEnd( event ) { if ( blockTouchTriggers ) { return; } disableTouchBindings(); var flags = getVirtualBindingFlags( event.target ), t; triggerVirtualEvent( "vmouseup", event, flags ); if ( !didScroll ) { var ve = triggerVirtualEvent( "vclick", event, flags ); if ( ve && ve.isDefaultPrevented() ) { // The target of the mouse events that follow the touchend // event don't necessarily match the target used during the // touch. This means we need to rely on coordinates for blocking // any click that is generated. t = getNativeEvent( event ).changedTouches[ 0 ]; clickBlockList.push({ touchID: lastTouchID, x: t.clientX, y: t.clientY }); // Prevent any mouse events that follow from triggering // virtual event notifications. blockMouseTriggers = true; } } triggerVirtualEvent( "vmouseout", event, flags); didScroll = false; startResetTimer(); } function hasVirtualBindings( ele ) { var bindings = $.data( ele, dataPropertyName ), k; if ( bindings ) { for ( k in bindings ) { if ( bindings[ k ] ) { return true; } } } return false; } function dummyMouseHandler(){} function getSpecialEventObject( eventType ) { var realType = eventType.substr( 1 ); return { setup: function( data, namespace ) { // If this is the first virtual mouse binding for this element, // add a bindings object to its data. if ( !hasVirtualBindings( this ) ) { $.data( this, dataPropertyName, {}); } // If setup is called, we know it is the first binding for this // eventType, so initialize the count for the eventType to zero. var bindings = $.data( this, dataPropertyName ); bindings[ eventType ] = true; // If this is the first virtual mouse event for this type, // register a global handler on the document. activeDocHandlers[ eventType ] = ( activeDocHandlers[ eventType ] || 0 ) + 1; if ( activeDocHandlers[ eventType ] === 1 ) { $document.bind( realType, mouseEventCallback ); } // Some browsers, like Opera Mini, won't dispatch mouse/click events // for elements unless they actually have handlers registered on them. // To get around this, we register dummy handlers on the elements. $( this ).bind( realType, dummyMouseHandler ); // For now, if event capture is not supported, we rely on mouse handlers. if ( eventCaptureSupported ) { // If this is the first virtual mouse binding for the document, // register our touchstart handler on the document. activeDocHandlers[ "touchstart" ] = ( activeDocHandlers[ "touchstart" ] || 0) + 1; if (activeDocHandlers[ "touchstart" ] === 1) { $document.bind( "touchstart", handleTouchStart ) .bind( "touchend", handleTouchEnd ) // On touch platforms, touching the screen and then dragging your finger // causes the window content to scroll after some distance threshold is // exceeded. On these platforms, a scroll prevents a click event from being // dispatched, and on some platforms, even the touchend is suppressed. To // mimic the suppression of the click event, we need to watch for a scroll // event. Unfortunately, some platforms like iOS don't dispatch scroll // events until *AFTER* the user lifts their finger (touchend). This means // we need to watch both scroll and touchmove events to figure out whether // or not a scroll happenens before the touchend event is fired. .bind( "touchmove", handleTouchMove ) .bind( "scroll", handleScroll ); } } }, teardown: function( data, namespace ) { // If this is the last virtual binding for this eventType, // remove its global handler from the document. --activeDocHandlers[ eventType ]; if ( !activeDocHandlers[ eventType ] ) { $document.unbind( realType, mouseEventCallback ); } if ( eventCaptureSupported ) { // If this is the last virtual mouse binding in existence, // remove our document touchstart listener. --activeDocHandlers[ "touchstart" ]; if ( !activeDocHandlers[ "touchstart" ] ) { $document.unbind( "touchstart", handleTouchStart ) .unbind( "touchmove", handleTouchMove ) .unbind( "touchend", handleTouchEnd ) .unbind( "scroll", handleScroll ); } } var $this = $( this ), bindings = $.data( this, dataPropertyName ); // teardown may be called when an element was // removed from the DOM. If this is the case, // jQuery core may have already stripped the element // of any data bindings so we need to check it before // using it. if ( bindings ) { bindings[ eventType ] = false; } // Unregister the dummy event handler. $this.unbind( realType, dummyMouseHandler ); // If this is the last virtual mouse binding on the // element, remove the binding data from the element. if ( !hasVirtualBindings( this ) ) { $this.removeData( dataPropertyName ); } } }; } // Expose our custom events to the jQuery bind/unbind mechanism. for ( var i = 0; i < virtualEventNames.length; i++ ){ $.event.special[ virtualEventNames[ i ] ] = getSpecialEventObject( virtualEventNames[ i ] ); } // Add a capture click handler to block clicks. // Note that we require event capture support for this so if the device // doesn't support it, we punt for now and rely solely on mouse events. if ( eventCaptureSupported ) { document.addEventListener( "click", function( e ){ var cnt = clickBlockList.length, target = e.target, x, y, ele, i, o, touchID; if ( cnt ) { x = e.clientX; y = e.clientY; threshold = $.vmouse.clickDistanceThreshold; // The idea here is to run through the clickBlockList to see if // the current click event is in the proximity of one of our // vclick events that had preventDefault() called on it. If we find // one, then we block the click. // // Why do we have to rely on proximity? // // Because the target of the touch event that triggered the vclick // can be different from the target of the click event synthesized // by the browser. The target of a mouse/click event that is syntehsized // from a touch event seems to be implementation specific. For example, // some browsers will fire mouse/click events for a link that is near // a touch event, even though the target of the touchstart/touchend event // says the user touched outside the link. Also, it seems that with most // browsers, the target of the mouse/click event is not calculated until the // time it is dispatched, so if you replace an element that you touched // with another element, the target of the mouse/click will be the new // element underneath that point. // // Aside from proximity, we also check to see if the target and any // of its ancestors were the ones that blocked a click. This is necessary // because of the strange mouse/click target calculation done in the // Android 2.1 browser, where if you click on an element, and there is a // mouse/click handler on one of its ancestors, the target will be the // innermost child of the touched element, even if that child is no where // near the point of touch. ele = target; while ( ele ) { for ( i = 0; i < cnt; i++ ) { o = clickBlockList[ i ]; touchID = 0; if ( ( ele === target && Math.abs( o.x - x ) < threshold && Math.abs( o.y - y ) < threshold ) || $.data( ele, touchTargetPropertyName ) === o.touchID ) { // XXX: We may want to consider removing matches from the block list // instead of waiting for the reset timer to fire. e.preventDefault(); e.stopPropagation(); return; } } ele = ele.parentNode; } } }, true); } })( jQuery, window, document ); // Script: jQuery hashchange event // // *Version: 1.3, Last updated: 7/21/2010* // // Project Home - http://benalman.com/projects/jquery-hashchange-plugin/ // GitHub - http://github.com/cowboy/jquery-hashchange/ // Source - http://github.com/cowboy/jquery-hashchange/raw/master/jquery.ba-hashchange.js // (Minified) - http://github.com/cowboy/jquery-hashchange/raw/master/jquery.ba-hashchange.min.js (0.8kb gzipped) // // About: License // // Copyright (c) 2010 "Cowboy" Ben Alman, // Dual licensed under the MIT and GPL licenses. // http://benalman.com/about/license/ // // About: Examples // // These working examples, complete with fully commented code, illustrate a few // ways in which this plugin can be used. // // hashchange event - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/hashchange/ // document.domain - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/document_domain/ // // About: Support and Testing // // Information about what version or versions of jQuery this plugin has been // tested with, what browsers it has been tested in, and where the unit tests // reside (so you can test it yourself). // // jQuery Versions - 1.2.6, 1.3.2, 1.4.1, 1.4.2 // Browsers Tested - Internet Explorer 6-8, Firefox 2-4, Chrome 5-6, Safari 3.2-5, // Opera 9.6-10.60, iPhone 3.1, Android 1.6-2.2, BlackBerry 4.6-5. // Unit Tests - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/unit/ // // About: Known issues // // While this jQuery hashchange event implementation is quite stable and // robust, there are a few unfortunate browser bugs surrounding expected // hashchange event-based behaviors, independent of any JavaScript // window.onhashchange abstraction. See the following examples for more // information: // // Chrome: Back Button - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/bug-chrome-back-button/ // Firefox: Remote XMLHttpRequest - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/bug-firefox-remote-xhr/ // WebKit: Back Button in an Iframe - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/bug-webkit-hash-iframe/ // Safari: Back Button from a different domain - http://benalman.com/code/projects/jquery-hashchange/examples/bug-safari-back-from-diff-domain/ // // Also note that should a browser natively support the window.onhashchange // event, but not report that it does, the fallback polling loop will be used. // // About: Release History // // 1.3 - (7/21/2010) Reorganized IE6/7 Iframe code to make it more // "removable" for mobile-only development. Added IE6/7 document.title // support. Attempted to make Iframe as hidden as possible by using // techniques from http://www.paciellogroup.com/blog/?p=604. Added // support for the "shortcut" format $(window).hashchange( fn ) and // $(window).hashchange() like jQuery provides for built-in events. // Renamed jQuery.hashchangeDelay to and // lowered its default value to 50. Added // and properties plus document-domain.html // file to address access denied issues when setting document.domain in // IE6/7. // 1.2 - (2/11/2010) Fixed a bug where coming back to a page using this plugin // from a page on another domain would cause an error in Safari 4. Also, // IE6/7 Iframe is now inserted after the body (this actually works), // which prevents the page from scrolling when the event is first bound. // Event can also now be bound before DOM ready, but it won't be usable // before then in IE6/7. // 1.1 - (1/21/2010) Incorporated document.documentMode test to fix IE8 bug // where browser version is incorrectly reported as 8.0, despite // inclusion of the X-UA-Compatible IE=EmulateIE7 meta tag. // 1.0 - (1/9/2010) Initial Release. Broke out the jQuery BBQ event.special // window.onhashchange functionality into a separate plugin for users // who want just the basic event & back button support, without all the // extra awesomeness that BBQ provides. This plugin will be included as // part of jQuery BBQ, but also be available separately. (function($,window,undefined){ // Reused string. var str_hashchange = 'hashchange', // Method / object references. doc = document, fake_onhashchange, special = $.event.special, // Does the browser support window.onhashchange? Note that IE8 running in // IE7 compatibility mode reports true for 'onhashchange' in window, even // though the event isn't supported, so also test document.documentMode. doc_mode = doc.documentMode, supports_onhashchange = 'on' + str_hashchange in window && ( doc_mode === undefined || doc_mode > 7 ); // Get location.hash (or what you'd expect location.hash to be) sans any // leading #. Thanks for making this necessary, Firefox! function get_fragment( url ) { url = url || location.href; return '#' + url.replace( /^[^#]*#?(.*)$/, '$1' ); }; // Method: jQuery.fn.hashchange // // Bind a handler to the window.onhashchange event or trigger all bound // window.onhashchange event handlers. This behavior is consistent with // jQuery's built-in event handlers. // // Usage: // // > jQuery(window).hashchange( [ handler ] ); // // Arguments: // // handler - (Function) Optional handler to be bound to the hashchange // event. This is a "shortcut" for the more verbose form: // jQuery(window).bind( 'hashchange', handler ). If handler is omitted, // all bound window.onhashchange event handlers will be triggered. This // is a shortcut for the more verbose // jQuery(window).trigger( 'hashchange' ). These forms are described in // the section. // // Returns: // // (jQuery) The initial jQuery collection of elements. // Allow the "shortcut" format $(elem).hashchange( fn ) for binding and // $(elem).hashchange() for triggering, like jQuery does for built-in events. $.fn[ str_hashchange ] = function( fn ) { return fn ? this.bind( str_hashchange, fn ) : this.trigger( str_hashchange ); }; // Property: jQuery.fn.hashchange.delay // // The numeric interval (in milliseconds) at which the // polling loop executes. Defaults to 50. // Property: jQuery.fn.hashchange.domain // // If you're setting document.domain in your JavaScript, and you want hash // history to work in IE6/7, not only must this property be set, but you must // also set document.domain BEFORE jQuery is loaded into the page. This // property is only applicable if you are supporting IE6/7 (or IE8 operating // in "IE7 compatibility" mode). // // In addition, the property must be set to the // path of the included "document-domain.html" file, which can be renamed or // modified if necessary (note that the document.domain specified must be the // same in both your main JavaScript as well as in this file). // // Usage: // // jQuery.fn.hashchange.domain = document.domain; // Property: jQuery.fn.hashchange.src // // If, for some reason, you need to specify an Iframe src file (for example, // when setting document.domain as in ), you can // do so using this property. Note that when using this property, history // won't be recorded in IE6/7 until the Iframe src file loads. This property // is only applicable if you are supporting IE6/7 (or IE8 operating in "IE7 // compatibility" mode). // // Usage: // // jQuery.fn.hashchange.src = 'path/to/file.html'; $.fn[ str_hashchange ].delay = 50; /* $.fn[ str_hashchange ].domain = null; $.fn[ str_hashchange ].src = null; */ // Event: hashchange event // // Fired when location.hash changes. In browsers that support it, the native // HTML5 window.onhashchange event is used, otherwise a polling loop is // initialized, running every milliseconds to // see if the hash has changed. In IE6/7 (and IE8 operating in "IE7 // compatibility" mode), a hidden Iframe is created to allow the back button // and hash-based history to work. // // Usage as described in : // // > // Bind an event handler. // > jQuery(window).hashchange( function(e) { // > var hash = location.hash; // > ... // > }); // > // > // Manually trigger the event handler. // > jQuery(window).hashchange(); // // A more verbose usage that allows for event namespacing: // // > // Bind an event handler. // > jQuery(window).bind( 'hashchange', function(e) { // > var hash = location.hash; // > ... // > }); // > // > // Manually trigger the event handler. // > jQuery(window).trigger( 'hashchange' ); // // Additional Notes: // // * The polling loop and Iframe are not created until at least one handler // is actually bound to the 'hashchange' event. // * If you need the bound handler(s) to execute immediately, in cases where // a location.hash exists on page load, via bookmark or page refresh for // example, use jQuery(window).hashchange() or the more verbose // jQuery(window).trigger( 'hashchange' ). // * The event can be bound before DOM ready, but since it won't be usable // before then in IE6/7 (due to the necessary Iframe), recommended usage is // to bind it inside a DOM ready handler. // Override existing $.event.special.hashchange methods (allowing this plugin // to be defined after jQuery BBQ in BBQ's source code). special[ str_hashchange ] = $.extend( special[ str_hashchange ], { // Called only when the first 'hashchange' event is bound to window. setup: function() { // If window.onhashchange is supported natively, there's nothing to do.. if ( supports_onhashchange ) { return false; } // Otherwise, we need to create our own. And we don't want to call this // until the user binds to the event, just in case they never do, since it // will create a polling loop and possibly even a hidden Iframe. $( fake_onhashchange.start ); }, // Called only when the last 'hashchange' event is unbound from window. teardown: function() { // If window.onhashchange is supported natively, there's nothing to do.. if ( supports_onhashchange ) { return false; } // Otherwise, we need to stop ours (if possible). $( fake_onhashchange.stop ); } }); // fake_onhashchange does all the work of triggering the window.onhashchange // event for browsers that don't natively support it, including creating a // polling loop to watch for hash changes and in IE 6/7 creating a hidden // Iframe to enable back and forward. fake_onhashchange = (function(){ var self = {}, timeout_id, // Remember the initial hash so it doesn't get triggered immediately. last_hash = get_fragment(), fn_retval = function(val){ return val; }, history_set = fn_retval, history_get = fn_retval; // Start the polling loop. self.start = function() { timeout_id || poll(); }; // Stop the polling loop. self.stop = function() { timeout_id && clearTimeout( timeout_id ); timeout_id = undefined; }; // This polling loop checks every $.fn.hashchange.delay milliseconds to see // if location.hash has changed, and triggers the 'hashchange' event on // window when necessary. function poll() { var hash = get_fragment(), history_hash = history_get( last_hash ); if ( hash !== last_hash ) { history_set( last_hash = hash, history_hash ); $(window).trigger( str_hashchange ); } else if ( history_hash !== last_hash ) { location.href = location.href.replace( /#.*/, '' ) + history_hash; } timeout_id = setTimeout( poll, $.fn[ str_hashchange ].delay ); }; // vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv // vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv REMOVE IF NOT SUPPORTING IE6/7/8 vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv // vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv $.browser.msie && !supports_onhashchange && (function(){ // Not only do IE6/7 need the "magical" Iframe treatment, but so does IE8 // when running in "IE7 compatibility" mode. var iframe, iframe_src; // When the event is bound and polling starts in IE 6/7, create a hidden // Iframe for history handling. self.start = function(){ if ( !iframe ) { iframe_src = $.fn[ str_hashchange ].src; iframe_src = iframe_src && iframe_src + get_fragment(); // Create hidden Iframe. Attempt to make Iframe as hidden as possible // by using techniques from http://www.paciellogroup.com/blog/?p=604. iframe = $('