Daff
Allelujah !!! You are a *LIFE SAVER*
Thanks.
The documentation does as you say note that jquery 1.8+ is required, but in my defence it is in one place only, deep within the weeds, and following Justin's earlier advice to check the blogs I find that the only reference to a <script src=.. etc refers to jquery 1.7.1 (the Patel's grandmother's funeral stuff) and I was already using 1.7.2 so ...
Come on guys, you can do better.
Please make the documentation explicit, heads up and in your face. The 1.8 dependency info should be right next to the can download invitations. It would avoid a lot of grief and on a purely business note would have saved you a lot more time just in dealing with my problem than it would take to amend the website ...
But thanks again
Ron
PS I've tracked the download of the original can.jquery.js. My pattern was to catch a Hacker News article referring to can, look at the website, navigate to the contact example, download it and play (and like it). I scavenged can.jquery.js from there. Having got everything working on my own, considerably more complex single page app, I then downloaded can.mustache and started on this grief filled journey.
All I need now is to find that 1.8.3 breaks all my other stuff. Here's hoping. Not.
Allelujah !!! You are a *LIFE SAVER*
Thanks.
The documentation does as you say note that jquery 1.8+ is required, but in my defence it is in one place only, deep within the weeds, and following Justin's earlier advice to check the blogs I find that the only reference to a <script src=.. etc refers to jquery 1.7.1 (the Patel's grandmother's funeral stuff) and I was already using 1.7.2 so ...
Come on guys, you can do better.
Please make the documentation explicit, heads up and in your face. The 1.8 dependency info should be right next to the can download invitations. It would avoid a lot of grief and on a purely business note would have saved you a lot more time just in dealing with my problem than it would take to amend the website ...
But thanks again
Ron
PS I've tracked the download of the original can.jquery.js. My pattern was to catch a Hacker News article referring to can, look at the website, navigate to the contact example, download it and play (and like it). I scavenged can.jquery.js from there. Having got everything working on my own, considerably more complex single page app, I then downloaded can.mustache and started on this grief filled journey.
All I need now is to find that 1.8.3 breaks all my other stuff. Here's hoping. Not.