This is the main repository for the jQuery Mobile project. From the official website:
A unified, HTML5-based user interface system for all popular mobile device platforms, built on the rock-solid jQuery and jQuery UI foundation. Its lightweight code is built with progressive enhancement, and has a flexible, easily themeable design.
jQuery Mobile 1.3 (1.3.0) works with versions of jQuery core from 1.7.0 to 1.9.0. You can find more information about how the library works, and what it is capable of, by reading the documentation.
You can contribute to the project by reporting issues, suggesting new features, or submitting pull requests. Please read our Contributing Guidelines before submitting.
Currently the library is shipped on the jQuery CDN/download as a single monolithic JavaScript file that depends on jQuery Core (not included) and a similarly bundled CSS file. For users we support the following build targets:
js
- resolve dependencies, build, concat, and minify the JavaScript used for jQuery Mobilecss
- resolve dependencies, build, concat, and minify all the css, just the structure css, and just the theme cssdemos
- build the js and css, and make the docs ready for static consumptionzip
- package all the JavaScript and all the css into a zip archivedist
(default target) - all of the abovelint
- Validates JavaScript files using JSHint
The easiest way to obtain a custom build is to use the download builder. With it, you can select the parts of the library you need and both the CSS and JavaScript dependencies will be resolved for you as a packaged/minified whole.
With node and grunt installed you can run the default target by simply issuing the following from the project root:
npm install
grunt
As of version 1.1 the library uses dependency management in the JavaScript build by providing AMD modules which can be added or removed from the core mobile meta module js/jquery.mobile.js
.
For example, if a user wished to exclude the form widgets to reduce the wire weight of their jQuery Mobile include they would first remove them from the meta module:
diff --git a/js/jquery.mobile.js b/js/jquery.mobile.js
index 6200fe6..3a4625c 100644
--- a/js/jquery.mobile.js
+++ b/js/jquery.mobile.js
@@ -19,12 +19,6 @@ define([
'./jquery.mobile.listview.filter',
'./jquery.mobile.listview.autodividers',
'./jquery.mobile.nojs',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.checkboxradio',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.button',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.slider',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.textinput',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.select.custom',
- './jquery.mobile.forms.select',
'./jquery.mobile.buttonMarkup',
'./jquery.mobile.controlGroup',
'./jquery.mobile.links',
And then run the build:
grunt js
To create a new theme:
-
Copy the
default
folder from CSS/Themes to a new folder named after your new theme (eg,my-theme
). -
Add customizations to the
jquery.mobile.theme.css
file. -
From the project root run the following
grunt
command:THEME=my-theme grunt css
-
The output will be available in the
$PROJECT_ROOT/dist
Again this assumes the theme css files are available in the css/themes/$THEME/
directory relative to the project root, css/themes/my-theme/
in the example.
The root of the repository is also the root of the documentation and, along with the test suite, acts as the test bed for bug fixes and features. You'll need to set up a server and get the test suite running before you can contribute patches.
Most of the documentation and testing pages rely on PHP 5+, and as a result Apache and PHP are required for development. You can install them using one of the following methods:
- one-click - MAMP for OSX, XAMP for OSX/Windows
- existing web server - eg,
~/Sites
directory on OSX. - virtual machine - If Vagrant is installed you can add this remote/branch and
vagrant up
In addition to vanilla Apache the following modules are required:
- Rewrite (mod_rewrite.so)
- Expire (mod_expires.so)
- Header (mod_headers.so)
Once you have your web server setup you can point it at the project directory.
Automated testing forms the backbone of the jQuery Mobile project's QA activities. As a contributor or patch submitter you will be expected to run the test suite for the code your patches affect. Our continuous integration server will address the remainder of the test suite.
You can run all the test suites by running the following command:
grunt test
You can choose to run only a subset of the tests by adding the --suites
option like:
grunt test --suites=button,slider
will only run the tests under tests/unit/button/
and tests/unit/slider/
.
You can also specify which versions of jQuery you want to test jQuery Mobile with by using the --jqueries
option:
grunt test --jqueries=1.8.2,git
Additionally, jQuery Mobile's test suite is split between integration and unit tests. Where the unit tests are meant to focus on a single piece of the library (eg, a widget) and the integration tests require multiple pieces of the library to function. You can target either type by including the --types
option when testing:
grunt test --types=unit
grunt test --types=integration
grunt test --types=unit,integration # default, equivalent to 'grunt test'
Often times when working on a feature or bug fix branch it's useful to pull in the latest from the parent branch. If you're doing this before submitting a pull request it's best to use git's rebase to apply your commits onto the latest from the parent branch. For example, working on new-feature
branch where upstream
is the remote at git://github.com/jquery/jquery-mobile.git
:
git checkout new-feature
git fetch upstream
git rebase upstream/master
## ... here you may have to resolve some conflicts ... ##
You can now push to your own fork and submit the pull request. Keep in mind that it's only a good idea to do this if you haven't already submitted a pull request unless you want to create a new one because your origin remote (your fork) will report a discrepancy. Again, please refer to the chapter in Pro Git on rebasing if you're new to it.