A flexible, light-weight module for creating custom components
http://nominalaeon.github.io/french-dip/
IE11 | ≥IE9 | ≤IE8 | any other browser |
---|---|---|---|
good | so-so | nope | recommended |
Because of a crucial incompatibility, FrenchDipJS will not work below IE9.
Any IE below 11 will work with the caveat that passing settings through the markup on data attributes is impossible.
All bug reports and problem issues require a jsFiddle.
Please fork this JSFiddle as a baseline.
- A test case clearly demonstrates the bug or issue.
- It contains the bare minimum HTML, CSS, and JavaScript required to demonstrate the bug.
- Assets are not minified (we cannot debug .min.js files).
- A link to your production site is not a reduced test case.
Providing a test case is the best way to get your issue addressed. Without a test case; your issue may be closed. You must provide a clear and simple way to reproduce the issue with the provided fiddle.
Contributions are welcome! That said, please be prepared to edit your pull request at request, and provide a jsFiddle of your fork working. Failure to do so will result in your pull request being closed.
Please note that while FrenchDip is open source, this is still my baby, and by submitting a pull request you are authorizing me to edit or modify it in any way shape or form. You will be listed in Github as a contributor, but I have and will continue to steer the direction of this project.
FrenchDipJS is named for Caleb Kniffen, who accidentally spilled a tub of au jus on himself, covered the evidence with a buttoned overshirt, but was later found out because our dev cube smelled like a butcher shop. FrenchDipJS is based on the original implementation by Caleb for an enterprise-level project that used it to connect dozens of custom components created by a large development team. It has been largely rewritten and made into a stand-alone project to provide more flexibility and allow an easier point of entry. Thanks, Caleb, you make me a better developer.
The first person I was brave enough to show this project to was Ken Wheeler. His criticisms and encouragement are what got me to the finish line. Then I stole his contributor guidelines. Thanks, man!
Copyright (c) 2016 Noah Rodenbeek
Licensed under the MIT license.