Docs in the release notes:
Example:
$('#nameOfPage').trigger('create');
Quote:
New “create” event: Easily enhance all widgets at once
While the page plugin no longer calls each plugin specifically, it
does dispatch a “pagecreate” event, which most widgets use to
auto-initialize themselves. As long as a widget plugin script is
referenced, it will automatically enhance any instances of the widgets
it finds on the page, just like before. For example, if the selectmenu
plugin is loaded, it will enhance any selects it finds within a newly
created page.
This structure now allows us to add a new create event that can be
triggered on any element, saving you the task of manually initializing
each plugin contained in that element. Until now, if a developer
loaded in content via Ajax or dynamically generated markup, they
needed to manually initialize all contained plugins (listview button,
select, etc.) to enhance the widgets in the markup.
Now, our handy create event will initialize all the necessary plugins
within that markup, just like how the page creation enhancement
process works. If you were to use Ajax to load in a block of HTML
markup (say a login form), you can trigger create to automatically
transform all the widgets it contains (inputs and buttons in this
case) into the enhanced versions. The code for this scenario would be:
$( ...new markup that contains widgets... ).appendTo( ".ui-page"
).trigger( "create" );
Create vs. refresh: An important distinction
Note that there is an important difference between the create event
and refresh method that some widgets have. The create event is suited
for enhancing raw markup that contains one or more widgets. The
refresh method that some widgets have should be used on existing
(already enhanced) widgets that have been manipulated programmatically
and need the UI be updated to match.
For example, if you had a page where you dynamically appended a new
unordered list with data-role=listview attribute after page creation,
triggering create on a parent element of that list would transform it
into a listview styled widget. If more list items were then
programmatically added, calling the listview’s refresh method would
update just those new list items to the enhanced state and leave the
existing list items untouched.