The example in this article describes how jQuery implements a flowing dotted box. Share it with everyone for your reference. The specific analysis is as follows:
I saw the effect of a flowing dotted box on the homepage of Baidu UEditor, so I tried to write one myself using jQuery. The effect is as follows:
css:
.dashed-box{width:500px;height:100px;overflow:hidden;position:relative;} .dashed-top{width:2000px;height:0px;border-bottom:2px #ccc dashed;position:absolute;top:0;left:-1400px;} .dashed-left{width:0px;height:2000px;border-left:2px #ccc dashed;position:absolute;left:0;top:-1600px;} .dashed-bottom{width:2000px;height:0px;border-bottom:2px #ccc dashed;position:absolute;left:0px;bottom:0;} .dashed-right{width:0px;height:2000px;border-left:2px #ccc dashed;position:absolute;right:0;top:-1600px;}
HTML:
<div class="dashed-box"> <div class="dashed-top"></div> <div class="dashed-left"></div> <div class="dashed-right"></div> <div class="dashed-bottom"></div> </div>
jQuery:
setInterval(function(){ var $left=$(".dashed-top").css("left"); var $top=$(".dashed-bottom").css("left"); $left=parseInt($left); $top=parseInt($top); if($left<0){ $left+=2; }else{ $left=-1400; } if($top>-1000){ $top-=2; }else{ $top=0; } $(".dashed-top").css("left",$left+"px"); $(".dashed-right").css("top",$left+"px"); $(".dashed-bottom").css("left",$top+"px"); $(".dashed-left").css("top",$top+"px"); },60);
I hope this article will be helpful to everyone’s jQuery programming.