On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 2:34 AM, Jeremy O'Connor <joconnor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > ""Nathan Nobbe"" <quickshiftin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message > news:7dd2dc0b0804080937x720af40n8f6850e807e246bd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > On Tue, Apr 8, 2008 at 7:41 AM, Jeremy O'Connor < > joconnor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > wrote: > > they pretty much have that in the scriptacuous lib under > > Ajax.Autocompleter, > > atm > > > > OK, but my control only does the Ajax call when the user clicks the Go > button, whereas the scriptaculous library does an Ajax call everytime the > user presses a key. not quite; it checks to see if anything has been entered in intervals that are specified by the frequency parameter. this allows users to potentially enter in several characters depending on the frequency interval. with the stock setting, i was able to type about 5 or 6 characters before an ajax request was issued. and its smart enough not to just incite an ajax request at every interval, because during the intervals, it checks to see if anything has been entered. you can easily analyze this behavior w/ the demo links i posted and firebugs' net tab. furthermore it has the tokens option. tokens enforce a tighter requirement on whether or not an autocompletion request will be invoked; in the case of Ajax.Autocompleter that means sending an ajax request to the server. not only do characters have to have been entered during the frequency interval, but one of the token characters has to have been entered. pretty slick if u ask me. you could easily add support for explicit autocompletion request (eg. by clicking a button) by subclassing Autocompleter.Base or one of the current subclasses (Ajax.Autocompleter or Autocompleter.Local) as long as those actually made sense for what you were trying to do. so scriptaculous has supplied performance conscience, convenient (for users and developers) controls and the ability to extend upon their work (using prototypes oo features). -nathan