From 842c3f91b5580a305e9fbba9791557cf534d73fd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Rebert Date: Tue, 25 Feb 2014 16:22:50 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] fix capitalization of JavaScript --- README.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 4d86f95..36e37ae 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -38,8 +38,8 @@ A small list of "gotchas" are provided below for designers and developers starti - Ratchet is designed to respond to touch events from a mobile device. In order to use mouse click events (for desktop browsing and testing), you have a few options: - Enable touch event emulation in Chrome (found in the overrides tab in the web inspector preferences) - - Use a javascript library like fingerblast.js to emulate touch events (ideally only loaded from desktop devices) -- Script tags containing javascript will not be executed on pages that are loaded with push.js. If you would like to attach event handlers to elements on other pages, document-level event delegation is a common solution. + - Use a JavaScript library like fingerblast.js to emulate touch events (ideally only loaded from desktop devices) +- Script tags containing JavaScript will not be executed on pages that are loaded with push.js. If you would like to attach event handlers to elements on other pages, document-level event delegation is a common solution. - Ratchet uses XHR requests to fetch additional pages inside the application. Due to security concerns, modern browsers prevent XHR requests when opening files locally (aka using the file:/// protocol); consequently, Ratchet does not work when opened directly as a file. - A common solution to this is to simply serve the files from a local server. One convenient way to achieve this is to run ```python -m SimpleHTTPServer ``` to serve up the files in the current directory to ```http://localhost:```