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While working on a recent client project I finally had the chance to use HTML5 video for a demo video on the homepage. We wanted a simple, no controls player with a Play button overlay. After some digging I found that while HTML5 is pretty well-supported in the latest and greatest browsers, out-of-the-box implementations don’t offer up a lot of control for external controllers or onPlay and onPause events.

I checked out a few publically available packages like VideoJS and Kaltura’s HTML5 Media Libary but everything I found seemed to cover too much of the spectrum. Building timeline scrubbers, volume control, and full playback controls into their libaries was just too much overhead for my little audio-less demo video.

In order to have something that was lightweight and easily portable between projects in the future, I put together SimpleVideo - a tiny little (100 line) jQuery plugin that wraps some much needed event control around the HTML5 video object.

The plugin depends on a standard video element (or multiple videos, if need be) in page like:

	<video width="853" height="480" poster="poster.png" id="test-video">
	<source src="homepage-walkthrough.mov" type="video/mp4"> </video>

and then is instantiated any time after the document ready event by passing the jquery object of the video to the simpleVideo function like:

	$('#test-video').simpleVideo();

This wraps the video in a div classed “simple-video-wrapper” and injects an overlay span classed “simple-video-overlay” into the wrapper. The markup for both of these elements are completely configurable through the defaults object.

SimpleVideo adds support for a number of events that can be triggered to control the video - “play” to start the video, “pause” to halt it, and “toggle” to simply toggle between states. These can be triggered using jQuery’s trigger method:

	// play the video
	$('#test-video').trigger('play');

	// pause the video
	$('#test-video').trigger('play');

	// toggle the video state
	$('#test-video').trigger('toggle');

These are the very events that the play overlay taps into. When clicked, by default, the play overlay fades out and the video starts playing. In turn, when the video is clicked it pauses and the play overlay fades back in. And finally, when the video ends the overlay is triggered on its own and fades in.

You can associate even more functionality with the video by binding your own events which will be triggered when the video plays and pauses - things like click tracking and analytics can be added without modifying the original plugin source. If a browser happens to not support HTML5 video, the plugin will detect this state and trigger the function "isNotSupported" set in the options.

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a simple html5 video plugin for jquery

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