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jWebAudio (GitHub: 01org / jWebAudio, License: Apache 2.0) by Wenli Zhang and published by Intel’s Open Source Technology Center is an audio library focused on games:
Web Audio seeks to process and synthesize audio in web applications. jWebAudio keeps the technical details of Web Audio under the hood and makes it easier to control your audio.
It has a jQuery API and also a framework-agnostic JavaScript API. Playing a set of sounds looks like this:
$('.sound').each(function() {
var $this = $(this);
var url = $this.data('sound');
$(this).jWebAudio('addSoundSource', {
url: url,
preLoad: true,
callback: function() {
$this.jWebAudio('play');
}
});
});
jWebAudio also supports synthesis and effects:
Sound effects include telephonize and cathedral currently. And you may create new sound effects using the combination of LOWPASS, HIGHPASS, BANDPASS, LOWSHELF, HIGHSHELF, PEAKING, NOTCH, ALLPASS.
There’s a demo here: jWebAudio demo.
Wenli also writes about JavaScript. Here’s a post about the gruesome details of Number
, parseFloat
, and parseInt
: Converting To Numbers In JavaScript.
Guille Paz sent in Scrolling.js Component (GitHub: pazguille / scrolling, License: MIT, component: pazguille/scrolling). It allows you to decouple scrolling from callbacks to avoid generating too many scroll events (the old debouncing issue):
var scrolling = require('scrolling');
scrolling(document.querySelector('#box'), callback);
The project is distributed as a component, and has a demo on the homepage.
Read more https://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailyjs/~3/bg1sgJeJL68/script-roundup
Recently on one of the websites I maintain[1], a strange message cropped up:
For a moment, I was two things
1) Surprised
2) Pleasanlty surprised
3) Somewhat disappointed
I was suprised because I wasn't aware that the message was there, pleasantly surprised because "somebody" was trying to protect the email address from spambots. Disappointed, because really and truly, that message is simply not necessary if Javascript IS enabled. So despite being happy about the protection, the implementation falls a bit short.
In case you want to disable this in Joomla, the only thing you need to do is Extensions Manager > Plug-In Manager > find the "Content - Email cloaking" plugin and disable it. Now that message will be gone, but so will your Spambot protection. For Spambot protection in Joomla, we do use a very good script, ZBBlock which works well on any PHP based website[2]. We also use Joo Recaptcha, to protect registration and contact pages from Spambots. The two together have worked very very effectively to rid us of the huge amount of SPAM we used to receive. Now it's mostly legit requests which we get!
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaExtensionsUpdated/~3/rVGclOSwT7I/21036
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaExtensionsUpdated/~3/iqLJX7EIIcw/18933
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaExtensionsUpdated/~3/1OmNSE_qNmc/10576
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