I'd like to select last div which id starts with "level":
var div = $('div[id^="level"]:last');
But as well I'd like to select the last and visible one. How could I perform that? Following doesn't work:
$('div[id^="level"]:last:visible');
I tried couple different combinations but none worked.
Try switching your :last and :visible that was you first filter all the elements by their visibility, and then filter for the last one.
$('div[id^="level"]:visible:last');
Maybe something like this?
var div = $('div[id^="level"]:last').filter(":visible");
Related
So I try to select a div within another div. My html goes like this:
<div id="Stage_game_page1"><div id="cube0">[...]</div><div id="cube1">[...]</div></div>
I want to select my #cube0 within my Stage_game_page specifically, with jQuery or JS.
The goal of the selection is to use it in an loop.
I tried :
var count =$("#Stage_game_page").children().length;
for(i=0; i<count;i++){
$("#Stage_game_page")$("#cube"+i)[...]
}
I don't understand what I'm doing wrong.
var count =$("#Stage_game_page").children().length;
for(i=0; i<count;i++){
$("#cube"+i);
}
This is sufficient to select the "#cube0"/"#cube1"/"#cube2" etc. especially since ids are always unique. To answer the question $("#cube0", "#Stage_game_page")... that is how you select a div in another div
The id attribute should only be used once! I see above that you're using id="cube0" twice. If you want your divs to be recognized in multiple instances, use a class instead (the . instead of the #). Using the same id twice will probably break your script.
I believe for your html, you could use id "cube0", "cube1", etc., as long as you're ok with entering them manually. That should work for the loop you'd like to use.
Loops through each div that starts with the id cube inside Stage_game_page1
$("#Stage_game_page1 > div[id^='cube']").each(function () {
alert($(this).html());
});
JSFiddle
Child Selctor
Starts with Selector
use each() for loop.
$('#Stage_game_page1').children().each(function(index) {
// your code here with index starts from 0
});
or this using jquery attribute starts with selector
$('#Stage_game_page1').find('[id^="cube"]').each(function(index) {
// your code here
});
You need to use .find() or .children() or the like.
The correct jQuery usage would be
$("#Stage_game_page").find('#cube'+i)
to find a div with that id inside the container #stage_game_page
You have duplicate cube0 in your html code..
and i think the look should contain something like that:
$("#cube"+i)[...]
One another solution is:
$("#Stage_game_page1 div[id='cube0']")
I have requirement where I wanted to find the amount fields like $412,341.40 from document.
I tried $("div:contains($)").css("background-color","yellow") but it returning parent div's also, and i just wanted color the child ones.
for e.g see the below image, the above jquery coloring both div's parent and child.
How can i color child div only? I am trying find all div's which contains string like $123,55.60.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
This will give your the direct parent.
$('div>:contains("$")').last().css("background-color","yellow")
JSFIDDLE DEMO
EDIT: The above will work great for only one occurrence of $. For multiple occurrences of text, use below code. This makes use .each() and looks for a closing </div> tag each time.
var divs = $('div>:contains("$")');
divs.each(function() {
var htmlinner = $(this).html();
if(htmlinner.indexOf('</div>') == -1) {
$(this).css("background-color", "yellow");
}
});
JSFIDDLE DEMO[2] for multiple occurrences
use:
$("div:contains('$')").find('div').css("background-color","yellow")
I have a table with the odd and even rows with a different CSS style tr:nth-child(2n){...}, and when I filter them with a textbox and jQuery, I hide() all the rows except the ones that match my criteria.
The problem is that now the rows remain with the current style (as I assume they keep the position despite they can't be seen), so the new odd and even rows doesnt match the CSS pattern.
How could I fix it?
Try to follow this example:
jQuery('tr:visible').filter(':odd').css({'background-color': 'red'});
jQuery('tr:visible').filter(':even').css({'background-color': 'yellow'});
Check here:
http://jsfiddle.net/KSL7j/1/
Hope it helps
Update
You can check this other example with odd and row CSS classes.
As CAbbott suggested in this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/KSL7j/21/
nth-child checks for the nth-child, not for the nth visible child or th nth whatever-styled child (hide() just adds display:none and nothing more...) and will never do.
I see two possible solutions:
1.add classes even/odd after filtering, just asking for the visible ones and then use your css on those classes
untested code:
var rows = $(tr[#display=block]);
rows.each(function(){
var index = rows.index(this);
if(index%2==0){
$(this).addClass('even');
}
else{
$(this).addClass('odd');
}
}
2.really remove the rows, not just hiding them
when you use hide() it is just set the display to none.
the structure of the dom is not modify so the nth-child do not work as you expected
you need to remove the even tr to get the effect you want.
if you want reset the rows. you can hold them in a variable and restore them back
var rows = $("tr");
var even = rows.filter(":even");
$("#trigger").click(function () {
even.hide();
even.remove();
});
http://jsfiddle.net/R2gBt/
Edit: one missing piece of information - I can't use the class selector because there are more divs with the same class. I already thought of that, but I forgot to mention it. I have no idea why my post got downvoted, but it seems awfully silly considering I provided a lot of information, gave it honest effort, and tried to be verbose with code examples. People on this forum are ridiculous sometimes.
I'm trying to set the id of a div that doesn't have one and there's no way I can give it one upon generation of the page. I've tried using jquery (.each, .contains, .find, .filter, etc.) and I can't seem to get it right. I know a ton of people have asked this question, but none of the answers made sense to me.
I have the ability to set the text (html?) of the div, but nothing else. It ends up looking like this:
<div class="dhxform_note" style="width: 300px;">Remaining letters: 500</div>
I want a handle to the div object so I can show the user how many more letters they can type by updating the text.
Using this:
$("div")
returns a list of all divs on the page. I can see the target div in the list, but I can't get jquery to return a single object.
I know it can also be done with something like this:
var divs = document.getElementsByTagName("div");
for(var i = 0; i < divs.length; i++) {
if( /^Remaining letters/.test(divs[i].innerText) )
divs[i].id = "kudosMsgNote"
}
}
but I was hoping to complete this with a cleaner looking solution involving jquery. I also simply want to know how to do it with jquery, aesthetics not withstanding.
Use a class selector.
var theDivViaTheClass = $(".dhxform_note");
Class Selector (“.class”)
Description: Selects all elements with the given class.
version added: 1.0
jQuery( ".class" )
class: A class to search for. An
element can have multiple classes; only one of them must match.
For class selectors, jQuery uses JavaScript's native
getElementsByClassName() function if the browser supports it.
You seem to be targeting the <div> by its text. Try using the :contains selector:
$("div").filter(':contains("Remaining letters")').first().attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
The .first() is to make sure you don't set the same id for multiple elements, in case multiple elements contain the text "Remaining letters".
Here's the docs for the :contains selector: http://api.jquery.com/contains-selector/
Be careful, the text you're looking for is case sensitive when using :contains!
Is that div the only one with the class dhxform_note? If so, you can use the class selector:
$('.dhxform_note').html();
With jQuery, you can specify any css selector to get at the div:
$(".dhxform_note").attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
will get you this element as well.
Selecting on inner text can be a bit dicey, so I might recommend that if you have control over the rendering of that HTML element, you instead render it like this:
<div name="remainingLetters" class="dhxform_note" style="width: 300px">Remaining Letters: 500</div>
And get it like this:
$("[name=remainingLetters]").attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
However, it's possible that you really need to select this based on the inner text. In that case, you'll need to do the following:
$("div").each(function() {
if ( /^Remaining letters/.test($(this).html()) ) {
$(this).attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
}
});
If you cannot set id for whatever reason, I will assume you cannot set class either. Maybe you also don't have the exclusive list of classes there could be. If all those assumptions really apply, then you can consider down your path, otherwise please use class selector.
With that said:
$("div").filter(function() {
return /^Remaining letters/.test($(this).text())
}).attr('id', 'id of your choice');
For situations where there are multiple divs with the class dhxform_note and where you do not know the exact location of said div:
$("div.dhxform_note").each(function(){
var text = $(this).text();
if(/^Remaining letters/.test(text)){
$(this).attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
}
});
EXAMPLE
If, however, you know that the div will always be the 2nd occurrence of dhxform_note then you can do the following:
$("div.dhxform_note").get(1).id = "kudosMsgNote";
EXAMPLE
Or do a contains search:
$("div.dhxform_note:contains('Remaining letters')").first().attr("id", "kudosMsgNote");
EXAMPLE
I'm wondering what's the best way to achieve this:
var $optionSets = $('#options').find('.option-set','#talents')..
That doens't work.
basically i want to say to assign var $optionSets for both .option-set and #talents
To achieve multiple selections in one "query", seperate your selectors by a comma:
$('#options').find('.option-set, #talents')
Note: "#talents" is an ID selector, not a class selector
DEMO