You searched for articles with the tag vlacalendar.
6 matches:

Back in business

Jul 18, 2009 After eight months of traveling I'm finally back home. During this time I didn't have much time to help with problems regarding the vlaCalendar. My excuse for that. I'm aware of the problems with the calendar regarding the Client-side Extension and regarding IE8.

I've decided not to provide any more support for the vlaCalendar - perhaps besides some quick fixes - and focus on a completely new version branded as 'Calendar Eightysix'. Calendar Eightysix will be ajax-less, better customizable and will have more features. Drop feature requests in the comments.

VlaCalendar commercial license available

Mar 13, 2009 After dozens of emails and comments regarding commercial use of the calendar I've decided to provide a commercial license. The license includes vlaCalendar version 1, version 2 and the client-side extension version 1.

Client-side only extension for vlaCalendar v2.1

Sep 6, 2008 The initial vlaCalendar was developed for use with database data. So the calendar uses AJAX calls to PHP parsed documents. This made the calendar only usable for users who have a PHP server.

Huy Do and I developed an extension that makes the vlaCalendar AJAX-less, and thus PHP-less: the client-side only extension for vlaCalendar v2.1.

VlaCalendar version 2.1 released

Jul 2, 2008 A new version of my Vista-like Ajax Calendar (vlaCalendar) has been released:
version 2.1 is made compatible with mootools installment, version 1.2, and offers some new features.

VlaCalendar v2 compatible with mootools 1.2b2

Jun 4, 2008 At first I decided to make the vlaCalendar compatible with mootools 1.2 when its gets out of beta stage. But I've received lot of e-mails and comments from people wanting to use the calendar with the beta version, which made me decide to make vlaCalender v2 also compatible with mootools 1.2 beta2!

Vista-like Ajax Calendar

Oct 17, 2007 When I first saw the new Windows Vista taskbar calendar I was amazed by its slick look and diligence. I created a web version of the calender using the MooTools javascript framework, Ajax, XHTML, CSS and PHP. Key features: animations in transition, authentic Vista-look and quick navigation by jumping back and forth between months, years and decades without drop-down boxes.