Does anyone have any techniques/tips/tricks to help me organize and implement multiple jQuery UI themes in one application?
I have resulted to using
you will have some issues if you apply this technique to ui widgets that overlay and are appended to the body - dialog, datepicker, autocomplete....
in the case of autocomplete, you can do the following to get a parent element with the scoped class - adding the scopped class to the UL of the autocomplete itself is not enough.
jQuery('.autocomplete').autocomplete({
source: function(request, response){
{....}
},
create: function(event, ui) {
jQuery('.ui-autocomplete').wrap('<span class="xxSCOPPEDCLASSxx"></span>');
}
});
Yes, but it depends on what you mean.
Let's say you want element A to be styled with Theme X, and element B with Theme Y. jQuery Theme Roller has this feature built in. When you go to download a theme (here), click Advanced Theme Settings on the right. Here, you can set the "CSS Scope". This will let you apply the jQuery UI classes (i.e. ui-corners-all
, etc.) from a specific theme. Here is the description they give for this option:
This field allows you to specify a CSS scope to limit your theme to a particular portion of a page. This is helpful when using multiple themes on a page. If you don't provide a CSS scope, your theme will apply to all UI elements on a page.
In most situations, you won't need to specify a CSS scope. Please Note: If you provide a CSS scope, you will not get an example page included in your download.
You can also change the Theme Folder Name:
This field allows you to specify a name for the theme folder in your download. This is helpful if you plan to use multiple themes on a page. It defaults to "theme".
If, however, you want to create a brand new theme, borrowing bits and pieces from several themes, you have two options: edit the CSS and image files yourself (not recommended), or use the Theme Roller tool to create your own.
How to Use:
CSS Scope is just a CSS selector. Let's say that theme X should apply only to all elements with class aClass
. In this case, your CSS Scope would be .aClass
. So, if you want to add rounded corners from theme X to an element (assuming your CSS Scope has been set to .aClass
), your HTML would like something like this:
<div class='ui-rounded-corners aClass'>
Content
</div>
searched for hours, and finally found the way to do it from the FilamentGroup, complete with tutorial and working examples.