In Facebook status update box, when I type @ and start typing and choose a name, say Steven Gerrard, from the friends list suggested by fb, my friend\'s name is highlighted in t
Sample code using the technique described by Julien at: http://jsfiddle.net/SBBZm/
Words that start with a Capital letter are highlighted in the example.
Here is how it works:
I've written a quick example based on jquery so you can try it yourself, without too much code to analyze.
Here is a sample code you can just copy-paste-save and try:
This sample code will highlight a defined set of word, here: "hello" and "world".
I'll let you adapt it the way you want.
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
<!-- Load jQuery -->
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4/jquery.min.js"></script>
<!-- The javascript xontaining the plugin and the code to init the plugin -->
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
// let's init the plugin, that we called "highlight".
// We will highlight the words "hello" and "world",
// and set the input area to a widht and height of 500 and 250 respectively.
$("#container").highlight({
words: ["hello","world"],
width: 500,
height: 250
});
});
// the plugin that would do the trick
(function($){
$.fn.extend({
highlight: function() {
// the main class
var pluginClass = function() {};
// init the class
// Bootloader
pluginClass.prototype.__init = function (element) {
try {
this.element = element;
} catch (err) {
this.error(err);
}
};
// centralized error handler
pluginClass.prototype.error = function (e) {
// manage error and exceptions here
//console.info("error!",e);
};
// Centralized routing function
pluginClass.prototype.execute = function (fn, options) {
try {
options = $.extend({},options);
if (typeof(this[fn]) == "function") {
var output = this[fn].apply(this, [options]);
} else {
this.error("undefined_function");
}
} catch (err) {
this.error(err);
}
};
// **********************
// Plugin Class starts here
// **********************
// init the component
pluginClass.prototype.init = function (options) {
try {
// the element's reference ( $("#container") ) is stored into "this.element"
var scope = this;
this.options = options;
// just find the different elements we'll need
this.highlighterContainer = this.element.find('#highlighterContainer');
this.inputContainer = this.element.find('#inputContainer');
this.textarea = this.inputContainer.find('textarea');
this.highlighter = this.highlighterContainer.find('#highlighter');
// apply the css
this.element.css('position','relative');
// place both the highlight container and the textarea container
// on the same coordonate to superpose them.
this.highlighterContainer.css({
'position': 'absolute',
'left': '0',
'top': '0',
'border': '1px dashed #ff0000',
'width': this.options.width,
'height': this.options.height,
'cursor': 'text'
});
this.inputContainer.css({
'position': 'absolute',
'left': '0',
'top': '0',
'border': '1px solid #000000'
});
// now let's make sure the highlit div and the textarea will superpose,
// by applying the same font size and stuffs.
// the highlighter must have a white text so it will be invisible
this.highlighter.css({
'padding': '7px',
'color': '#eeeeee',
'background-color': '#ffffff',
'margin': '0px',
'font-size': '11px',
'font-family': '"lucida grande",tahoma,verdana,arial,sans-serif'
});
// the textarea must have a transparent background so we can see the highlight div behind it
this.textarea.css({
'background-color': 'transparent',
'padding': '5px',
'margin': '0px',
'font-size': '11px',
'width': this.options.width,
'height': this.options.height,
'font-family': '"lucida grande",tahoma,verdana,arial,sans-serif'
});
// apply the hooks
this.highlighterContainer.bind('click', function() {
scope.textarea.focus();
});
this.textarea.bind('keyup', function() {
// when we type in the textarea,
// we want the text to be processed and re-injected into the div behind it.
scope.applyText($(this).val());
});
} catch (err) {
this.error(err);
}
return true;
};
pluginClass.prototype.applyText = function (text) {
try {
var scope = this;
// parse the text:
// replace all the line braks by <br/>, and all the double spaces by the html version
text = this.replaceAll(text,'\n','<br/>');
text = this.replaceAll(text,' ',' ');
// replace the words by a highlighted version of the words
for (var i=0;i<this.options.words.length;i++) {
text = this.replaceAll(text,this.options.words[i],'<span style="background-color: #D8DFEA;">'+this.options.words[i]+'</span>');
}
// re-inject the processed text into the div
this.highlighter.html(text);
} catch (err) {
this.error(err);
}
return true;
};
// "replace all" function
pluginClass.prototype.replaceAll = function(txt, replace, with_this) {
return txt.replace(new RegExp(replace, 'g'),with_this);
}
// don't worry about this part, it's just the required code for the plugin to hadle the methods and stuffs. Not relevant here.
//**********************
// process
var fn;
var options;
if (arguments.length == 0) {
fn = "init";
options = {};
} else if (arguments.length == 1 && typeof(arguments[0]) == 'object') {
fn = "init";
options = $.extend({},arguments[0]);
} else {
fn = arguments[0];
options = $.extend({},arguments[1]);
}
$.each(this, function(idx, item) {
// if the component is not yet existing, create it.
if ($(item).data('highlightPlugin') == null) {
$(item).data('highlightPlugin', new pluginClass());
$(item).data('highlightPlugin').__init($(item));
}
$(item).data('highlightPlugin').execute(fn, options);
});
return this;
}
});
})(jQuery);
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="container">
<div id="highlighterContainer">
<div id="highlighter">
</div>
</div>
<div id="inputContainer">
<textarea cols="30" rows="10">
</textarea>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Let me know if you have any question or if you need help with this code.
After reviewing the way of Facebook do this, I see that the text shown on the screen is:
<span class="highlighterContent"><b>Ws Dev</b> is good</span>
That span is put in a table (with lots of div container), which is style accordingly.
So I think this is the process:
When you type in the box, Facebook does have a textarea that capture what you type, but use javascript to show the typed HTML content in a table.
When you submit, the formatted content in a hidden input (that you already spot in the question) get submitted. It's like "@[100001915747xxx:Steven Gerrard] is awesome".
When the formatted message submit, it is saved to the database. Everytime the page get loaded, from the saved message the HTML is composed and return.
To get the similar effect, you can use any jQuery autocomplete plugin.