jQuery.noConflict();
(function($) { 
  $(function() {
    // more code using $ as alias to jQuery
  });
})(jQuery);
// other code using $ as an alias to the other library
// when the DOM is ready...
jQuery(document).ready(function () {

var $panels = jQuery('#home .slide');
var $container = jQuery('#home #featued-control');

// if false, we'll float all the panels left and fix the width 
// of the container
var horizontal = true;

// float the panels left if we're going horizontal
if (horizontal) {
  $panels.css({
   // 'float' : 'left',
    'position' : 'relative' // IE fix to ensure overflow is hidden
  });
  
  // calculate a new width for the container (so it holds all panels)
  $container.css('width', $panels[0].offsetWidth * $panels.length);
}

// collect the scroll object, at the same time apply the hidden overflow
// to remove the default scrollbars that will appear
var $scroll = jQuery('#home #featured').css('overflow', 'hidden');

// apply our left + right buttons
//$scroll
  //.before('<a id="prevlink" href="#">Anterior </a>')
  //.after('<a id="nextlink" href="#">Siguiente </a>');

// handle nav selection
function selectNav() {
  $(this)
    .parents('ul:first')
      .find('a')
        .removeClass('selected')
      .end()
    .end()
    .addClass('selected');
}

//$('#slider .navigation').find('a').click(selectNav);

// go find the navigation link that has this target and select the nav
function trigger(data) {
 // var el = $('#slider .navigation').find('a[href$="' + data.id + '"]').get(0);
  //selectNav.call(el);
}

if (window.location.hash) {
  trigger({ id : window.location.hash.substr(1) });
} else {
  // $('ul.navigation a:first').click();
}

// offset is used to move to *exactly* the right place, since I'm using
// padding on my example, I need to subtract the amount of padding to
// the offset.  Try removing this to get a good idea of the effect
var offset = parseInt((horizontal ? 
  $container.css('paddingTop') : 
  $container.css('paddingLeft')) 
  || 0) * -1;


var scrollOptions = {
//prev:'div.prev',// Selector to the 'prev' button (absolute!, meaning it's relative to the document)
	//	next:'div.next',// Selector to the 'next' button (absolute too)
		//axis:'xy',// The default is 'y' scroll on both ways
		//navigation:'#navigation li a',
		duration:300,// 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)
		interval:7000, // It's the number of milliseconds to automatically go to the next	
  target: $scroll, // the element that has the overflow
  
  // can be a selector which will be relative to the target
  items: $panels,
  
  navigation: '.navigation a',
  
  // selectors are NOT relative to document, i.e. make sure they're unique
  prev: 'a#prevlink', 
  next: 'a#nextlink',
  
  // allow the scroll effect to run both directions
  axis: 'xy',
  
  onAfter: trigger, // our final callback
  
  offset: offset,
  
  // duration of the sliding effect
  duration: 500,
  
  // easing - can be used with the easing plugin: 
  // http://gsgd.co.uk/sandbox/jquery/easing/
  easing: 'swing'
};

// apply serialScroll to the slider - we chose this plugin because it 
// supports// the indexed next and previous scroll along with hooking 
// in to our navigation.
jQuery('#home').serialScroll(scrollOptions);

// now apply localScroll to hook any other arbitrary links to trigger 
// the effect
jQuery.localScroll(scrollOptions);

// finally, if the URL has a hash, move the slider in to position, 
// setting the duration to 1 because I don't want it to scroll in the
// very first page load.  We don't always need this, but it ensures
// the positioning is absolutely spot on when the pages loads.
scrollOptions.duration = 1;
jQuery.localScroll.hash(scrollOptions);

});
