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currently I have the a basic jQuery gallery:

<ul>
    <li>IMAGE</li>
    <li>IMAGE</li>
</ul>
// with NAV stuff

I cycle through the images with animations and everything works great.

However, my client "NEEDS" another setup, whereby there will be a new page per slide. GQ.com is a good example of this. Click the link to check it out.

If you will notice, each time you click 'Previous' or 'Next' a new page is loaded, creating more pageviews for the site.

My Question: Is it possible to have this with my current setup (b/c it can't change)? Or is it only possible through the server-side programming? How are they doing this?

1 Answer 1

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Take a look at what's actually happening there. The URL for the "next" button looks like this:

<a href="?slide=2" title="Next slide" onclick="s_objectID=&quot;http://www.gq.com/style/wear-it-now/201010/best-jean-jackets-denim?slide=2_1&quot;;return this.s_oc?this.s_oc(e):true">Next</a>

But when you click on it, where does it take you? You get here:

http://www.gq.com/style/wear-it-now/201010/best-jean-jackets-denim#slide=2

Notice the difference? It's a hash # instead of a question mark ?. They aren't reloading the entire page, they are making an HTTP request asynchronously in Javascript and using some form of hijax to change the browser's hash value (that which appears after the #...the only part that javascript can change), thereby allow the user to cycle backward and forward with the regular browser controls. The way to do this is to build in methods in your javascript to detect the value of what's after the hash both on page load and after a page's hash value has changed. Then you can have another javascript function actually control changing it when you click the "next" or "previous" buttons, and return false to kill the normal anchor href execution.

The reason this is called "hijax" is because your site still has perfectly-valid hrefs (e.g. you can go to that link above but replace the # with a ? and get to the exact same application state). This allows search engines to crawl your site and users without javascript to effectively use your site, while also providing all the AJAXery that people expect in fully-featured browsers. The trick here is to make sure that what comes after the # can be passed via AJAX to your server, have the server understand that it's an AJAX call, and process a return value that your javascript can understand. The easiest way is to use the extra bit after the # as the URL of your AJAX request and let the server interpret everything properly.

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  • Awesome, purely awesome! I noticed the # and ? changes but didn't know how nor why. Thanks so much for this. But am I correct in saying that they are getting valid new page requests (notice the ads change each time) with each new slide? Sep 30, 2010 at 19:16
  • Oh, and is this possible with my current setup? Sep 30, 2010 at 19:21
  • From the browser's POV, it's a "new" page only in the sense that it represents a new spot in the browser history. However, the "page change" appears to simply be an illusion. It looks like they are loading new ads via javascript for every new "page" request, which is a little silly, but it is one way to monetize an AJAXy site. Don't let all the flashing fool you, though...it's just a fancy way of doing AJAX. IMO, using this hijax method is the best way to develop a website (for now). The specifics of how you get it done is up to you.
    – treeface
    Sep 30, 2010 at 19:23
  • Not really sure what your current setup is...on the HTML side of things, it doesn't matter what's there. IMO, the best practice would be to use an MVC framework like CodeIgniter so that you can have a controller function that handles a particular type of incoming requests (call it imageViewer or something). Then imageViewer determines if a request is AJAX or not...if it is, it loads the image rotator html there as a string and passes that back to javascript in the browser. If it isn't AJAX, it loads that view directly into the page that it generates before it sends it to the browser.
    – treeface
    Sep 30, 2010 at 19:25
  • And using jquery, you can simply put that HTML string directly into the .html() or .append() (or any of the other) functions and bam your AJAX is done with minimal effort.
    – treeface
    Sep 30, 2010 at 19:26

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