Let's suppose that the data spans on 15 pages, and the window width is 5 page links. The links are built on "frames" of 5 pages each: [1-5] [6-10] [11-15] Pager in "Jumping" mode always shows the same 5 page links while you are on one of these pages. Here's a temporal succession of the links, starting from page 1 and moving forward. There are brakets around current page number to highlight this:
a) {1} 2 3 4 5 => // first frame: [1-5] b) <= 1 {2} 3 4 5 => c) <= 1 2 {3} 4 5 => d) <= 1 2 3 {4} 5 => e) <= 1 2 3 4 {5} => // HERE IT JUMPS TO THE NEXT FRAME f) <= {6} 7 8 9 10 => // second frame: [6-10] g) <= 6 {7} 8 9 10 => h) <= 6 7 {8} 9 10 => |
Instead of jumping from one frame to the other, with Pager in "Sliding" mode the change is done smoothly, and the current page is always shown at the center of the "window" (except of course for the first and the last pages):
a) {1} 2 3 4 5 => [15] b) [1] <= 1 {2} 3 4 5 => [15] c) [1] <= 1 2 {3} 4 5 => [15] // HERE IT's STARTING WORKING AS DESIGNED d) [1] <= 2 3 {4} 5 6 => [15] // see: current page number is at the center of the window e) [1] <= 3 4 {5} 6 7 => [15] // and it stays there... f) [1] <= 4 5 {6} 7 8 => [15] g) [1] <= 5 6 {7} 8 9 => [15] h) [1] <= 6 7 {8} 9 10 => [15] |