I did this page for my personal web site. If you have seen the first, rough draft so to say of my sight, you will notice I have taken out the links as I am working on the site. But the links to the past projects work fine. If you click on the plus sign, you will see a description of the project, and if you click on the minus sign, the description will hide. I liked this idea because with all the descriptions on the page, the page looked too text heavy. This method allows the user to pick and choose which site they want to know more about, while not being overwhelmed or distracted by other text.
(I guess I didn't bookmark this properly the first time). I did this very basic form for school website that I may be redoing (its in the very early stages). However, the graphic I created is not showing up on firefox, only on Safari. I've tried everything that I know and still nothing shows up. The form, however, works.
This is web prog 5d. It's the email and name validate one. It's about how QU students should have a choice between owning a Mac or a PC instead of just blindly choosing what the school tells you to get.
This is web prog 5-g. It is about PHP basics. At first PHP can be confusing, but once you know what it is trying to do it isn't all that bad. It's just a getting the coding correct.
Here is a form page that requires a valid email and name for submission. There are three input fields: name, age and email. However, the name and email fields are required while the age field is optional.
I hoped tabs were unobtrusive... I went back and redid a page from Module 1, putting all my travel abroad trips in one tabbed content box. The first sequence of code I tried nearly ruined my life, but Dr. Halavais was kind enough to send me a link that didn't make me want to end my life.
Small issue: when fonts are user-changed, it can bounce the last tab to a second line. But good enough to meet the requirements for the assignment, and good for you for trying something especially challenging.
I used my style sheet from a previous quiz to create a from that required a first name and a valid email address. The validation code came from w3schools, while the required field stuffs came from http://javascript.internet.com/. Because the code came from different sources they required a little tweaking, and I felt the need to add my own unique voice to the pop-up warnings.
Here I have created unobtrusive Javascript thanks to the tutorials on JQuery. I took three pictures of my dogs and added comments to them that you can hide or show. There were four seperate files created for this clean unobtrusive script including, one for JQuery (leo21.nfshost.com/JQhtml.js) one for css, one for the downloaded JQuery and one html file.
This is a link to a working comments page (linked to a database table) which requires a valid name and email address before submission using Javascript. An error message appears & fades at the bottom of the form if something is omitted. I also made the same thing happen using PHP, so there are also messages at the top of the page from that code. I got the Javascript from http://www.leigeber.com/2008/04/dynamic-inline-javascript-form-validation/, and included this citation in my js page. Upon submission, a thank you message appears at the top of the form.