Rounding corners with JavaScript has a long history. Everything started on 16th of March 2005 with Nifty Corners and loads of other libs followed.
RUZEE.ShadedBorder itself is the successor of RUZEE.Borders, which was the most feature-rich round corners library out there. But it wasn’t quite easy to use, was slow, had some browser compatibility problems, etc.
ShadedBorders removes most of these limitations and comes with the following features:
- JavaScript-only Photoshop(tm)-like rendering without external images
- Round corners
- Drop shadows
- Glow effects
- Gradient backgrounds
- Graceful degradation - will look ok if JavaScript is turned off
- Borders with different widths and semi-transparency
- Full support for liquid designs
- Anti-Aliasing
- On-hover support
- Disable some of the corners, e.g. bottom-left
- Change borders on-the-fly
- Real transparency - looks perfect on any background
- Cross-Browser: Firefox, Internet Explorer (>=6.0), Safari, Opera (>=9.0)
- Non-obstrusive
- Leight-weight (8.8KB uncompressed)
- Fast (0.5s for the example on a 2.2GHz machine)
- No JavaScript library dependencies
Have a look at the full-featured example, the simple example, or just download the whole library as a ZIP archive (MIT licensed).
Version History
- 2007-12-04 - v0.6.1: Fix transparency on IE7
- 2007-12-02 - v0.6: Semi-transparent fat borders (thanks Ryan) and IE6 hover fixes (thanks NewTrax)
- 2007-10-23 - v0.5: More robust DIV creation, add split borders example for headline/content (for Virsir)
- 2007-10-21 - v0.4: Add graceful degradation, simplify usage, fix IE7(?)
- 2007-10-20 - v0.3: Gradient background support, speed improvements
- 2007-03-27 - v0.2: Fix IE: check boxes inside tables were disappearing
- 2007-03-25 - v0.1: Initial release
How-to
Some steps are required to make your page use ShadedBorder:
Include ShadedBorder to your HTML header section:
<script src="shadedborder.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
Next, define an element you want to round. It is important that it does not directly contain text nodes, i.e. text must always be wrapped inside an HTML element (the “p” in this example):
<div id="round_me">
<p>I want to be rounded!</p>
</div>
Then, in the header section, create the border object. You can define the radius of the round corners, the radius of the drop shadow and the width of the border.
var border = RUZEE.ShadedBorder.create({ corner:8, shadow:16, border:2 });
Note that all parameters are optional, as long as you at least specify one of them. You may also define, which corners/edges should not be rounded. Have a look at the simple example source code for details.
The last thing to do is, to add some JavaScript code directly at the end of the HTML Body which will render the border around the element with the ID “round_me”:
...
<script type="text/javascript">
border.render('round_me');
</script>
The radiuses and widths you specified for the border in the header section are one way of customization. The other way is to change colors. You do this in your CSS file:
#round_me, #round_me .sb-inner { background:red; }
#round_me .sb-shadow { background:blue; }
#round_me .sb-border { background:green; }
This will give your border a red “inner-style”, a blue shadow and a green border - don’t ever use this color combination - it will look extremely ugly ![]()
The first line is important for graceful degradation (new from v0.4 on): the background for your .sb-inner class must also be set on the element itself - but only for .sb-inner, NOT for .sb-shadow or .sb-border!
Adding some hover effect also happens in your CSS file. The following code snippet will change the “inner-style” of your border to purple, once you hover with your mouse over the #round_me element (hey purple will make this beast look even uglier - yuk!).
#round_me:hover, #round_me:hover .sb-inner { background:purple; }
Of course, this will work with “.sb-border” and “.sb-shadow” as well.
Tips
You can use RUZEE.ShadedBorder with the JavaScript library of your choice to get support for CSS-Selectors (e.g. using Prototype, jQuery, etc.). Here’s an example using the $$ function of Prototype to round all child elements of the element with the ID “header” that have the class “tab”:
border.render($$('#header .tab'));
Limitations
- Safari 2 seems to get pretty slow when showing ShadedBorder. I’m looking for people with a Mac and some JavaScript knowledge to speed things up. If you feel like you can help, please contact me via my contact form. Thanks!
- Since a ShadedBorder adds DIV elements to the element you round, those elements cannot be UL, OL, TABLE, TR, etc.. Allowed are DIV, LI, TD, TH, i.e. those elements that are allowed to directly contain DIV elements.
Hi, the name's Steffen and I'm writing about the Web, programming
and all those things coming to my mind. Enjoy your stay.
March 26th, 2007 at 18:31
I’m doing my tests with Safari 2.0 (412) - works ok. Can anyone confirm that 2.0.4 has problems?
March 26th, 2007 at 19:03
Steffen: I’ve done testing now with 17 shaded borders elements here are the results:
When no shadow is used works fairly well.
When a shadow is used it’s slower than slow. Locked up IE7 pretty good.
Also noticed that when a shadow value is used less than 15 or so the border and the shadow get messed up. So doing something like this - RUZEE.ShadedBorder.create({corner:8, shadow:8, border:1}); Will not display correctly.
Now the rueez.border script worked faily well with a shadow.
March 26th, 2007 at 19:14
corner and shadow are different in ShadedBorder - I think I need to do a tutorial for that - both start at the center so if you set both to 8 they’ll be “the same” - maybe this causes the problem. I need to check that. Try to set the shadow to about twice the radius of the corner and see if this fixes things. Oh and I’ve seen that my previous hint did the trick, right?
March 26th, 2007 at 19:29
This is a *fantastic* script and I applaud your efforts. Thank you! Would it be possible to build future versions to degrade gracefully in the event that the browser doesn’t support javascript or the user doesn’t have javascript enabled? I have pre-defined DIV styles that I’d like to retain if javascript isn’t available. Thanks again!
March 26th, 2007 at 19:42
@Chris: Yep, that’s on the roadmap. I’m right now searching for a simple solution for the site designer. Everything I have in mind right now is a bit … too much “writing efforts”.
March 26th, 2007 at 19:53
LOL…understood! I look forward to the future versions as you have the time.
March 26th, 2007 at 20:31
Yes your previous hint did fix my problem.
Your explanation of border, and shadow makes sense now. I did have to double the shadow number to get it to work. So it’s not a bug….. It’s a feature!
Also the glow border looks better than the old script. If there was a way to speed up the drawing on multiple elements that would be great, but I know there are a lot of s created in doing so.
Anyhow, very stratified with what you have done and it works so far in IE 7 and Firefox.
March 26th, 2007 at 21:24
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March 26th, 2007 at 22:26
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March 27th, 2007 at 0:41
Great Job. Couple questions: Is it possible to apply a single RUZEE.ShadedBorder var with an entire CSS class? Basically I want to use CSS selectors the way we could with RUZEE.Borders. Sounded like you were implying that if you used prototype as well you could use the CSS selectors? Is there some other alternative that might be a little lighter?
I also wanted to say that I would really like to see the on hover functionality get worked out for IE6. I was trying to use csshover.htc to get the same hover affect but it is really slow to render.
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