13197Image Viewer, version 4.7http://www.jpowered.com/javascript/image-viewer/index.htmThe Image Viewer provides a very efficient way to display multiple images within a small area of a web page. The script is fully cross browser and platform ensuring all your visitors will enjoy the benefits. In addition the script code is compact and hence very fast to load.JavaScript > Scripts and Programs > Image Effects > Image DisplayOct 12, 2006Patrick OBrien
Highslide JS, formerly Vevstein Thumbnail Expander, is a piece of JavaScript that streamlines the use of thumbnail images on web pages. The library offers these features and advantages:
CMotion Image Gallery is a versatile gallery script that uses the most intuitive input devise available, the user's mouse, to control it! The user can direct both the image scrolling direction and speed just by placing the mouse on either spectrums of the image gallery. Clicking on an image can then load a larger version of it, navigate to a page etc. Apart from the gallery's dimensions, you can also specify its top scrolling speed, with the script then creating a range from 0-top speed and distributing it evenly across the gallery. Cool! This script works in all modern DHTML browsers- IE5+, NS6/ Firefox 1.0+, Opera 7+. FYI we named it "Cmotion" to stand for "Cursor Motion." :)
Prior to DHTML, viewing the images behind the thumbnails meant displaying them in their own browser window (by setting a URL to the image's path), which interrupts your visitor's browsing experience. This cool DHTML script allows you to show images inline on the page, with the images downloaded only when called. The displayed image is dragable, so the user can adjust its position dynamically. Browsers other than IE 4+ and NS 6+ will automatically resort to the old method of displaying the images- in their own browser window. What else could you ask for in a thumbnail viewer?
Description: Overlap Image Viewer lets you quickly associate an image with any element on your page, so that when the mouse rolls over it, the desired image is shown on top of it. A nice "dimming" effect is applied to the element while the loaded image is shown. You simply give an element a special CSS class name plus a title attribute pointing to the URL/path of the desired image, and that's it! Rolling over that element now triggers the effect.
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