Offset Explorer



  1. Offset Explorer For Sale
  2. Offset Tool Head Gasket Ford Explorer
  3. Offset Explorer 2.1

Browse the largest online customer truck gallery, calculate your offset and shop the top brands of wheels, tires, and suspensions in the industry for aftermarket trucks. The offset measures the distance between the wheel’s mounting surface and the centerline of the wheel, while the backspacing measures the distance between the wheel’s mounting surface and the back lip of the wheel. These measurements help determine which wheels are compatible with which vehicles, so the wheels do not stick out too far past.

Purchase

Offset Explorer can be evaluated for free for 30 days without any obligations, after the evaluation period you need to purchase a commercial license or uninstall the software if you are using the product for commercial, educational or non-profit purposes.

Each license is for a single user, you can install the software on multiple computers as long as they are only used by the same licensed user. If you wish to install the software on a computer shared by multiple users, you have to buy a separate license for each user.

What Will You Get

When you purchase a license below you will get all the following benefits.

  • You can legally use the software for commercial purposes after the initial 30-day evaluation period
  • Free email support for 365 days following the purchase
  • Email notifications of new versions and patch releases
  • Access to the plugin feature

Credit Card

Please click on the appropriate 'Buy Now' icon below to purchase a license. On the following page, please enter the number of licenses you need in the 'Quantity' field. If buying more than one license, you must enter the user names in the notes-section.

After we receive your payment, your licence file(s) will be emailed to you within 1-2 business days, usually the same day.

Number of UsersPrice per UserPurchase
1-10$79
11-20$72
21-50$67

For quantities greater than 50, please contact sales.

Purchase Order

Please email your official purchase order on company letterhead to sales@offsetexplorer.com. Please include the following information so we can process your order more quickly

  • The requested quantity
  • The name of the company the product will be licensed to
  • Your billing address and your delivery address, if different
  • Name, phone and fax number of the contact person for your order
  • The e-mail address to which the order confirmation and invoice should be sent, and your e-mail delivery address, if different

Support & Maintenance

Use the link below to purchase support and maintenance for an additional 12 months. Having an active support and maintenance contract will give you the following benefits.

  • Free upgrades to all major and minor updates during the maintenance period.
  • Free email and phone support during the support period.
Support & Maintenance for 12 months$29

Returns

Offset explorer tires

If you're not 100% satisfied with the product, you can request a full refund within 30 days of your purchase.

offset option

Default

0

Possible Values

number
A number of pixels.
percentage string
Ex: '50%'. A percentage of the viewport's height.
function
The function must return a number of pixels, as if you were using a number offset. The function is re-evaluated whenever a trigger point is recalculated, allowing for changes in layout.
'bottom-in-view' string
This is a shortcut, an alias for a function offset that will trigger the handler when the bottom of the element hits the bottom of the viewport.
'right-in-view' string
This is a shortcut, an alias for a function offset that will trigger the handler when the right of the element hits the right of the viewport. This is only useful in conjunction with the horizontal option.

After the handler, the offset is probably the most important and used option. By default, the handler is triggered when the top of an element hits the top of the viewport. The offset changes the location of that trigger point. This option accepts several different types of values. Let's look at each of them.

Number Offset

Offset Explorer For Sale

A number offset represents the number of pixels from the top of the viewport where the handler should trigger. The default, 0, means the handler triggers when the top of the element hits the top of the viewport. If we set this to 25, it will trigger when the top of the element is 25px from the top of the window.

Number offsets can be negative. An offset of -25 triggers the handler when the top of the element is 25px above the top of the viewport, out of sight.

Percentage Offset

A percentage offset refers to a percentage of the window's height. An offet of '50%' will trigger when the top of the element is 50% of the way from the top of the window, or simply put, hits the middle of the window.

Just like number offsets, percentages can be negative. Also like number offsets, negatives indicate the top of the element is a certain percentage of the window height beyond the top of the viewport.

Function Offset

Function offsets allow for dynamic, complex, creative offsets that depend on runtime values. Let's say we had a waypoint that we wanted to trigger when the bottom of the element hit the top of the window. Let's also say that element has a height of 100px. Easy enough:

But what if we didn't know the height of the element? Maybe it contains user controlled content and could be any height. We might be tempted to do this:

This may work, but what if the height of the element changes during a user's time browsing? Perhaps they resized their browser and the element is now taller. If we used the offset above, the waypoint's trigger point would not adjust. This is where function offsets come in.

This offset function will now stay up to date with the element's height as the browser resizes. This is because resizing the browser triggers a refresh all, which forces the recalculation of every waypoint's trigger point. Trigger points are only calculated during a refresh, which occurs when a new waypoint is created, the browser is resized, or a refresh method is manually called. If you change the layout of your page or manipulate the DOM in a way that may effect a waypoint's trigger point, you should call refresh manually.

bottom-in-view Offset

One of the most common needs when using Waypoints is to detect when the entire element is in view, or more precisely, when the bottom of the element hits the bottom of the window. Because it's so common, a shortcut string is included, 'bottom-in-view'.

right-in-view Offset

'right-in-view' is the horizontal analog to the 'bottom-in-view' alias. It is a shortcut for a function offset, and triggers when the right of the element hits the right edge of the viewport. Here we'll use a custom context, just to make it easier on this site's design:

Offset Tool Head Gasket Ford Explorer


Offset Explorer 2.1

As you can see in the above example, the offset is calculated in relation to the bounding box of the scrollable context element. This is true of all the different possible offset value types.





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