Responsive HTML5 / jQuery Photo and...

User 434929 Photo


Ambassador
938 posts

I would love to see an easy-to-use Windows & Mac app that enables you to create beautiful, professional, responsive jQuery Photo and Video Gallery from CC.

Guys at coffeecup are awesometacular.
User 2924428 Photo


Registered User
1,718 posts

Ooh good idea !! I would love to see one that is responsive too !!
User 187934 Photo


Senior Advisor
20,239 posts
Online Now

I'm in. I've been building my own with Jquery and almost grabbed Wow slider but am holding out for CC.:cool:
I can't hear what I'm looking at.
It's easy to overlook something you're not looking for.

This is a site I built for my work.(RSD)
http://esmansgreenhouse.com
This is a site I built for use in my job.(HTML Editor)
https://pestlogbook.com
This is my personal site used for testing and as an easy way to share photos.(RLM imported to RSD)
https://ericrohloff.com
User 38401 Photo


Senior Advisor
10,951 posts

I too would love to see this done by CC, something that will rival Wow Slider, Visual Light Box, Visual Slide Show, Video Slideshow and HTML Video all in one! I really hate that most of those programs listed here are almost the same thing and could have been combined if the creators weren't so money hungry to make you purchase them separately. Would love to have this all in one program so I don't have to try remembering which is which! hahaha so many file extensions to remember and they are so closely marked lol.

Thumbs up, + 100 from me!
User 474778 Photo


Registered User
215 posts

Have a look at FancyBox (http://fancybox.net/).

See a simple, non-modal, pop-up text-box application of FancyBox at work by clicking the "Read More" links within the Events Calendar section of this site: http://www.gopgroton.com/ (I built this site on a CC fluid layout, BTW.) More complex use would be photo or video galleries.

Note that FancyBox supports responsive design. Watch what happens when you re-size the browser window.

FancyBox is based on a particular version of jquery (http://jquery.com/). As such, it can be tricky to use on a site that already has jquery loaded for some other purpose. But there's a workaround.

I got interested in FancyBox for the reason that Jo Ann cites: Learn one thing, use it in many ways.

FancyBox (or something like it) would benefit from the sort of polishing, use-testing by an interested community, comprehensive use-case examples and careful documentation that CoffeeCup could bring to the party.
halfnium -AT- alum.mit.edu
Yes, I looked just like that in 1962.

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