This playscript produces rounded boxes with a drop shadower without using images. You are able to use different formats on the same page. Highly customizable. Non-obtrusive.
'Highlight' your menu links as the mouse moves over them using this CSS powered script! Thanks to CSS, the effect is very customizable, efficient, does not rely on script, and finally, very small in file size. Visible in IE4+, NS6+, Opera 6/Mozilla, and degrades well with the rest. A good illustration of what CSS alone can accomplish.
This two level CSS Top Menu uses regular lists (<ul>) for the underlining structure, making it search engine friendly and very lightweight. The script is also a breeze to customize. Cool.
This JavaScript allows a user to read a volume of text, without having to scroll the page and without having to load different pages. This makes for easier maintenance as only one page needs to be updated, yet the content is visible to search engines. Very useful for large amounts of text.
Tired of adding even and odd classes to your tables to distinguish the rows? This JavaScript will do it for you automatically. You can even use it with lists!
This JavaScript menu script displays a cool description of the JavaScript link the mouse is currently over, gently brought into view. The JavaScript menu is styled entirely using CSS, even the color change during the mouseover, making the script lightweight and very easy to customize.
This JavaScript code creates a tabbed JavaScript menu on the web page by using CSS. Cool and great, enjoy!
Using CSS, you can change the default cursor icon associated with a particular element, even specifying your own cursor image (in IE6+) instead. However, with power comes responsibility. Modify the cursor only when it makes sense to, such as when you're applying it to a custom interface. Like popup windows of JavaScript, changing cursors can quickly become counterproductive and irritating to the user.


10/09/2008
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