﻿// Easing equation, borrowed from jQuery easing plugin
// http://gsgd.co.uk/sandbox/jquery/easing/
jQuery.easing.easeOutQuart = function (x, t, b, c, d) {
	return -c * ((t=t/d-1)*t*t*t - 1) + b;
};

jQuery(function( $ ){
	/**
	 * Most jQuery.serialScroll's settings, actually belong to jQuery.ScrollTo, check it's demo for an example of each option.
	 * @see http://flesler.demos.com/jquery/scrollTo/
	 * You can use EVERY single setting of jQuery.ScrollTo, in the settings hash you send to jQuery.serialScroll.
	 */
	
	/**
	 * The plugin binds 6 events to the container to allow external manipulation.
	 * prev, next, goto, start, stop and notify
	 * You use them like this: $(your_container).trigger('next'), $(your_container).trigger('goto', [5]) (0-based index).
	 * If for some odd reason, the element already has any of these events bound, trigger it with the namespace.
	 */		
	
	/**
	 * IMPORTANT: this call to the plugin specifies ALL the settings (plus some of jQuery.ScrollTo)
	 * This is done so you can see them. You DON'T need to specify the commented ones.
	 * A 'target' is specified, that means that #screen is the context for target, prev, next and navigation.
	 */
	$('#slidewrapper').serialScroll({
		target:'.sections',
		items:'li', // Selector to the items ( relative to the matched elements, '#sections' in this case )
		prev:'a.prev',// Selector to the 'prev' button (absolute!, meaning it's relative to the document)
		next:'a.next',// Selector to the 'next' button (absolute too)
		axis:'x',// The default is 'y' scroll on both ways
		duration:700,// Length of the animation (if you scroll 2 axes and use queue, then each axis take half this time)
		force:true, // Force a scroll to the element specified by 'start' (some browsers don't reset on refreshes)
		cycle:true,
		exclude:2,
	});
	
	
});
