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April 8, 2012 22:41
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Working with impress.js
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/* | |
If you want more control over impress.js, the first thing is to change the way you call it. The demo | |
initializes impress.js like this: | |
<script src="js/impress.js"></script> | |
<script>impress().init();</script> | |
You want to change this to the following: | |
<script src="js/impress.js"></script> | |
<script> | |
var api = impress(); | |
api.init(); | |
</script> | |
The key difference here is that you now have a JavaScript variable called api that you can call | |
impress's methods on. The full documentation is in impress's index.html, but in short, you now have | |
api.next(), api.prev(), and api.goto() for moving around the slideshow. | |
For timing the transitions between slides, you can use two functions that are part of JavaScript | |
itself; no need for jQuery or anything. These functions are setInterval() and setTimeout(). They both | |
take two arguments: a thing to call, and a delay (in milliseconds) to wait before calling it. | |
setInterval() will call your thing over and over again; setTimeout() will call it once. | |
For instance, if you make the changes above, the simplest thing you can add is an auto-advancing | |
interval, like so: | |
setInterval(api.next, 5000); | |
That will move to the next slide every 3 seconds. | |
It's important to note the difference between passing a function or method by name, like api.next, | |
versus actually calling the method: api.next(). Those parentheses tell JavaScript to actually | |
call/invoke the method. Another way to deal with this is to pass the name of the function as a string, | |
which is what the w3schools example does: http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/met_win_setinterval.asp . | |
That works in their examples, but I think it's better to understand passing a function vs. calling it, | |
and know when to use which. | |
As the w3schools example makes clear, you can pass your own functions to setInterval() and | |
setTimeout(). | |
The other thing was attaching additional functionality to specific slides, like being able to redirect | |
to another page on the last slide, or load a video on a given slide. | |
There are a bunch of ways to do this. A key thing we discovered this week is that impress.js adds | |
classes to a slide when visible, and removes them when not visible. All slides receive the classes | |
"step" and "slide". The current slide additionally receives "active" and "present". Previous slides all | |
have "past" and upcoming slides all have "future". | |
Therefore, if you give your all your slides ids, like "slide2", it's just a matter of knowing when | |
"slide2" has the "active" class. There's a simple jQuery method, hasClass() that provides this | |
functionality: $("#slide2").hasClass('active') . Conversely, you can find out which slide is currently | |
active by looking up the "active" class and finding the corresponding element id: $('.active').attr('id') | |
(impress.js does not rely on jQuery, so you need to load it separately.) | |
One way to track the slide transitions and current slide is to use setInterval() to see what the | |
current slide is every so often, and so something when appropriate. Here's some barebones code that | |
does just that: | |
*/ | |
function handleCurrentSlide() { | |
var currentSlide = $('.active').attr('id'); | |
if (currentSlide === 'slide2') { | |
console.log('on slide 2!'); | |
} else if (currentSlide === 'slide3') { | |
console.log('on slide 3!'); | |
} | |
} | |
setInterval(handleCurrentSlide, 200); | |
/* | |
Here, handleCurrentSlide() is called 5 times a second, and logs when you're on slide2 or slide3, but | |
not slide1. There's an obvious flaw in the code as-is. It will log to the console every time it runs, | |
regardless of whether it's a new slide or not. That is almost always NOT what you want. | |
One way to improve this is to keep track of what slide the user was on the last time the function ran, | |
and only do things when the previous slide and current slide are different, indicating a slide change: | |
*/ | |
var previousSlide; | |
function handleCurrentSlide() { | |
var currentSlide = $('.active').attr('id'); | |
if (previousSlide !== currentSlide) { | |
if (currentSlide === 'slide2') { | |
console.log('on slide 2!'); | |
} else if (currentSlide === 'slide3') { | |
console.log('on slide 3!'); | |
} | |
} | |
previousSlide = currentSlide; | |
} | |
setInterval(handleCurrentSlide, 200); | |
/* | |
The lines involving previousSlide were the only ones I added. | |
That gets the job done, but it's a little inefficient. After all, your code is constantly checking to | |
see if something has changed, instead of just being told when it changes, kind of like Kramer and | |
Moviefone: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM79_itR0Nc#t=15s . | |
JavaScript has a great mechanism for code to trigger and respond to events, and impress.js uses this | |
internally to make things work. With jQuery, it's easy to hook into events using on(). Here's an | |
example that does roughly the same thing, but only gets called when a slide transition actually occurs: | |
*/ | |
$(document).ready(function() { | |
$(document).on('impress:stepenter', function(e) { | |
var currentSlide = $(e.target).attr('id'); | |
if (currentSlide === 'slide2') { | |
setTimeout(api.next, 2000); | |
} else if (currentSlide === 'slide3') { | |
window.location = 'http://www.google.com/'; | |
} | |
}); | |
}); | |
/* | |
Here, when the user gets to the second slide, it will automatically advance to the third slide after 2 | |
seconds, and the third slide will result in redirecting the user to Google. | |
There are a TON of ways to improve this but this should work well enough for your case. | |
I think combining setInterval()/setTimeout() with knowing when a user lands on a slide should make a | |
lot of things possible. | |
*/ |
@creativetim I submitted an issue with that, as a feature! I do not know if he will add it or if it has been added, as I am a novice programmer, and am just learning javascript.
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I wanted to make my presentation play automatically on a continuous loop without using jQuery and came away with the following: