educational

JQuery Lets Users Drag, Drop, Sort

One of the most compelling uses for jQuery is its ability to enhance the interactivity of next-gen user interface applications. In this arena, several techniques standout, such as the interactions offered by its Draggable, Droppable and Sortable plugins.

According to the jQuery UI website (www.jqueryui.com), the jQuery UI Draggable plugin makes selected elements draggable by mouse. To implement this technique, add the class ui-draggable to the draggable element. During drag, the plugin automatically adds the class ui-draggable-dragging to the desired element. For scripting dragand-drop events, the jQuery UI Droppable plugin provides a drop target for draggable elements.

Extending the power of Draggable, the jQuery UI Droppable plugin makes defined elements “droppable,” allowing them to accept draggable elements.

The action’s callbacks (start, stop, drag) each receive two arguments, including the original browser event and a UI object. These objects include the ui.helper, which is the object representing the element being dragged; ui.position, which provides the current position of the helper, relative to the offset element; and ui.offset, which gives the current absolute position of the helper, relative to the page.

“To manipulate the position of a draggable during drag,” states the jQuery UI website, “you can either use a wrapper as the draggable helper and position the wrapped element with absolute positioning, or you can correct internal values like so: $(this).data(‘draggable’) .offset.click.top -= x.”

Extending the power of Draggable, the jQuery UI Droppable plugin makes defined elements “droppable,” allowing them to accept draggable elements. The plugin allows users to specify individual draggable elements, or types of draggables to accept.

Due to this, the plugin provides an additional callback: ui.draggable, the current draggable element.

There are many applications where the ability to drag and drop page elements is very desirable, but what happens when the order of these elements requires reclassification?

Enter the jQuery UI Sortable plugin, which enables selected elements to be sortable by dragging them with a mouse. As with Droppable, additional callbacks are offered, including ui.item, which is the current dragged element; ui.placeholder (if one is defined); and ui.sender, identifying the sortable element where the item comes from.

While some applications for these technologies may seem overkill for adult, tools such as providing website subscribers with a customizable member’s area or gallery ranking experience will separate one site from its competitors. See how you can make these techniques work for your favorite online project!

Related:  

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

What DSA and GDPR Enforcement Means for Adult Platforms

Adult platforms have never been more visible to regulators than they are right now. For years, the industry operated in a gray zone: enormous traffic, massive data volume and minimal oversight. Those days are over.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Making the Case for Network Tokens in Recurring Billing

A declined transaction isn’t just a technical error; it’s lost revenue you fought hard to earn. But here’s some good news for adult merchants: The same technology that helps the world’s largest subscription services smoothly process millions of monthly subscriptions is now available to you as well.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Navigating Age Verification Laws Without Disrupting Revenue

With age verification laws now firmly in place across multiple markets, merchants are asking practical questions: How is this affecting traffic? What happens during onboarding? Which approaches are proving workable in real payment flows?

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

How Adult Businesses Can Navigate Global Compliance Demands

The internet has made the world feel small. Case in point: Adult websites based in the U.S. are now getting letters from regulators demanding compliance with foreign laws, even if they don’t operate in those countries. Meanwhile, some U.S. website operators dealing with the patchwork of state-level age verification laws have considered incorporating offshore in the hopes of avoiding these new obligations — but even operators with no physical presence in the U.S. have been sued or threatened with claims for not following state AV laws.

Larry Walters ·
opinion

Top Tips for Bulletproof Creator Management Contracts

The creator management business is booming. Every week, it seems, a new agency emerges, promising to turn creators into stars, automate their fan interactions or triple their revenue through “secret” social strategies. The reality? Many of these agencies are operating with contracts that wouldn’t survive a single serious dispute — if they even have contracts at all.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Building Sustainable Revenue Without Opt-Out Cross-Sales

Over the past year, we’ve seen growing pushback from acquirers on merchants using opt-out cross-sales — also known as negative option offers. This has been especially noticeable in the U.S. In fact, one of our acquirers now declines new merchants during onboarding if an opt-out flow is detected. Existing merchants submitting new URLs with opt-out cross-sales are being asked to remove them.

Cathy Beardsley ·
trends

How to Handle Payment Disputes Without Sacrificing Trust

You can run the best-managed and most compliant website out there, but that still doesn’t completely shield you from the risks tied to payment disputes. Buyer’s remorse, an unclear billing description or even a simple misunderstanding can lead a customer to dispute a transaction. Accumulate enough disputes, and both your reputation and revenue could be at risk.

Jonathan Corona ·
trends

WIA Profile: Taylor Moore

With a 70-person team and a growing slate of tools for content creators, the Teasy Agency has developed a reputation for putting talent first. That commitment owes a lot to co-founder Taylor Moore’s own experiences as a cam model.

Jackie Backman ·
profile

WIA Profile: Cathy Turns Creator Platform Experience Into a Model-First Playbook

As both a model and industry executive, Cathy lives in two worlds at once. “Since I do both things, I can act as the liaison between the model community and the rest of the SextPanther team,” she tells XBIZ.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

From Compliance to Confidence: The Future of Safety in Adult Platforms

In numerous countries and U.S. states, laws now require platforms to prevent minors from accessing age-inappropriate material. But the need for safeguarding doesn’t end with age verification. Today’s online landscape also places adult companies at uniquely high risk for inadvertently facilitating exploitation, abuse or reputational harm, or of being accused of doing so.

Andy Lulham ·
Show More