fancyBox is a tool that offers a nice and elegant way to add zooming functionality for images, html content and multi-media on your webpages.
More information and examples: http://www.fancyapps.com/fancybox/
License: http://www.fancyapps.com/fancybox/#license
Copyright (c) 2011 Janis Skarnelis - [email protected]
To get started, download the plugin, unzip it and copy files to your website/application directory. Load files in the section of your HTML document. Make sure you also add the jQuery library.
<head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7/jquery.min.js"></script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/fancybox/jquery.fancybox.css" type="text/css" media="screen" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/fancybox/jquery.fancybox.pack.js"></script>
</head>
Create your links with a title
if you want a title to be shown, and add a class:
<a href="large_image.jpg" class="fancybox" title="Sample title"><img src="small_image.jpg" /></a>
If you have a set of related items that you would like to group,
additionally include a group name in the rel
(or data-fancybox-group
) attribute:
<a href="large_1.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery" title="Sample title 1"><img src="small_1.jpg" /></a>
<a href="large_2.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery" title="Sample title 1"><img src="small_2.jpg" /></a>
Initialise the script like this:
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
$('.fancybox').fancybox();
});
</script>
Script uses the href
attribute of the matched elements to obtain the location of the content and to figure out content type you want to display. You can specify type directly by adding classname (fancybox.image, fancybox.iframe, etc).
Ajax:
<a href="/example.html" class="fancybox fancybox.ajax">Example</a>
Iframe:
<a href="example.html" class="fancybox fancybox.iframe">Example</a>
Inline:
<a href="#example" class="fancybox">Example</a>
SWF:
<a href="example.swf" class="fancybox">Example</a>
Image:
<a href="example.jpg" class="fancybox">Example</a>
Note, ajax requests are subject to the same origin policy.
Helpers provide a simple mechanism to extend the capabilities of fancyBox. There are two built-in helpers - 'overlay' and 'title'. You can disable them or set custom options:
Disable 'overlay' helper and change title location:
$(".fancybox").fancybox({
helpers: {
overlay : null,
title: {
type : 'inside'
}
}
});
Also available are event driven callback methods. The this
keyword refers to the current or upcoming object (depends on callback method). Here is how you can change title:
$(".fancybox").fancybox({
afterLoad : function() {
this.title = 'Image ' + (this.index + 1) + ' of ' + this.group.length + (this.title ? ' - ' + this.title : '');
}
});
It`s possible to open fancyBox programmatically in various ways:
HTML content:
$.fancybox( '<div><h1>Lorem Lipsum</h1><p>Lorem lipsum</p></div>', {
title : 'Custom Title'
});
DOM element:
$.fancybox( $("#inline"), {
title : 'Custom Title'
});
Custom object:
$.fancybox({
href: 'example.jpg',
title : 'Custom Title'
});
Array of objects:
$.fancybox([
{
href: 'example1.jpg',
title : 'Custom Title 1'
},
{
href: 'example2.jpg',
title : 'Custom Title 2'
}
], {
padding: 0
});
There are several methods that allow you to interact with and manipulate fancyBox, example:
Close fancybox:
$.fancybox.close();
Have a bug? Please create an issue on GitHub at https://github.com/fancyapps/fancyBox/issues