I'm working on a simple jQuery switch button. The kind you mostly see on mobile.
[ on | off ]
I have the below snippet that I found in a jsfiddle. But it won't work; I tried wrapping it in -
$('.slider-button').toggle(function(){
$(this).addClass('on').html('Quizz');
},function(){
$(this).removeClass('on').html('Read');
});
})
I tried wrapping it in a on ready as well.
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.slider-button').toggle(function(){
$(this).addClass('on').html('Quizz');
},function(){
$(this).removeClass('on').html('Read');
});
})
I'm loading the latest in jQuery:
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.0.3.min.js"></script>
Mark-Up:
<div class="slider-frame">
<span class="slider-button">OFF</span>
</div>
It simply wont toggle onClick.
Edit: Here's an attempt at a fiddle; http://jsfiddle.net/Hn27Q/
Still can't get it; and actually none of the CSS3 is being seen at mobile; any suggestions appreciated.
Bill
The .toggle version that accepted functions to alternate on clicks has been removed as of v1.9 (see http://api.jquery.com/toggle-event/)
You can see What to use instead of `toggle(...)` in jQuery > 1.8? for an implementation of that functionality as an extension..
You should use it like this
$('.slider-button').toggleClick (function(){
$(this).addClass('on').html('Quizz');
},function(){
$(this).removeClass('on').html('Read');
});
});
for ease of use i copy the code here
$.fn.toggleClick = function(){
var methods = arguments, // store the passed arguments for future reference
count = methods.length; // cache the number of methods
//use return this to maintain jQuery chainability
return this.each(function(i, item){
// for each element you bind to
var index = 0; // create a local counter for that element
$(item).click(function(){ // bind a click handler to that element
return methods[index++ % count].apply(this,arguments); // that when called will apply the 'index'th method to that element
// the index % count means that we constrain our iterator between 0 and (count-1)
});
});
};
Related
I'm fairly new to Javascript, and am trying to get an 'on click enlarge' kind of effect, where clicking on the enlarged image reduces it again. The enlarging happens by replacing the thumbnail by the original image. I also want to get a slideshow using images from my database later on.
In order to do that, I made a test where I replace the id which indicates enlarging is possible by a class and I also use a global variable so that I can keep a track of the url I'm using. Not sure this is the best practice but I haven't found a better solution.
The first part works fine, my image gets changed no problem, values are also updated according to the 'alert' statement. However, the second part, the one with the class never triggers.
What am I doing wrong (apart from the very likely numerous bad practices) ?
If instead of changing the class I change the id directly (replacing .image_enlarged by #image_enlarged, etc.), it seems to call the first function, the one with the id, yet outputs the updated id, which is rather confusing.
var old_url = "";
$(function(){
$('#imageid').on('click', function ()
{
if($(this).attr('class')!='image_enlarged'){
old_url = $(this).attr('src');
var new_url = removeURLPart($(this).attr('src'));
$(this).attr('src',new_url); //image does enlarge
$(this).attr('class',"image_enlarged");
$(this).attr('id',"");
alert($(this).attr('class')); //returns updated class
}
});
$('.image_enlarged').on('click', function (){
alert(1); //never triggered
$(this).attr('src',old_url);
$(this).attr('class',"");
$(this).attr('id',"imageid");
});
});
function removeURLPart(e){
var tmp = e;
var tmp1 = tmp.replace('thumbnails/thumbnails_small/','');
var tmp2 = tmp1.replace('thumbnails/thumbnails_medium/','');
var tmp3 = tmp2.replace('thumbnails/thumbnails_large/','');
return tmp3;
}
As for the html, it's really simple :
<figure>
<img src = "http://localhost/Project/test/thumbnails/thumbnails_small/image.jpg" id="imageid" />
<figcaption>Test + Price thing</figcaption>
</figure>
<script>
document.write('<script src="js/jquery-1.11.1.min.js"><\/script>');
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost/Project/js/onclickenlarge.js"></script>
From the API: http://api.jquery.com/on/
The .on() method attaches event handlers to the currently selected
set of elements in the jQuery object.
When you do $('.image_enlarged').on(...) there is no element with that class. Therefore, the function is not registered in any element.
If you want to do so, then you have to register the event after changing the class.
Here's an example based on your code: http://jsfiddle.net/8401mLf4/
But this registers the event multiple times (every time you click) and it would be wrong. So I would do something like:
$('#imageid').on('click', function () {
if (!$(this).hasClass('image_enlarged')) {
/* enlarge */
} else {
/* restore */
}
}
JSfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/8401mLf4/2/
Try using:
addClass('image-enlarged')
instead of:
.attr('class',"image_enlarged");
the best way to do this would be to have a small-image class and a large image class that would contain the desired css for both and then use addClass() and removeClass depending on which you wanted to show.
I have this following jquery on my view:
$(document).ready(function() {
$(function() {
$('#link1').click(function() {
$('#link2').show();
$('#link1').hide();
$('#frame').attr('src', 'http://google.com/');
});
});
});
$(document).ready(function() {
$(function() {
$('#link2').click(function() {
$('#link1').show();
$('#link2').hide();
$('#frame').attr('src', 'http://yahoo.com/');
});
});
});
On pageload, the link2 is set to hide. What the jQuery does is: when the link with id link1 is clicked, it will show the link with idlink2 and hide itself. And vice versa.
My problem is it seems that my jQuery code can still be simplified. Is there other ways I can do what I wanted with simpler version? Thanks for the help!
Working example : http://jsfiddle.net/cuJBm/
$(document).ready(function() {
$(function() {
var linkSet = $('#link1').add('#link2')
linkSet.click(function() {
linkSet.toggle();
});
});
});
The add method allows you to add a different selector to the set of matchers, thus binding both clicks simultaneously. By saving the constructed set to a variable (linkSet), it stops you from having to traverse the DOM twice.
The only two assumption made here, are
1) That in the initial state only one is visible.
2) That the id structure is meaningful, useful, and classes will not suffice.
http://jsfiddle.net/cuJBm/1/
To answer your second question about setting an attribute on #frame. There are numerous ways of doing this. Perhaps the simplest is to add the following to your .click handler (after the toggle).
if ($(this).attr('id')=='link1'){
$('#frame').attr('src', 'www.google.com');
} else if ($(this).attr('id')=='link2'){
$('#frame').attr('src', 'www.yahoo.com');
}
Personally, I would probably add a custom attribute to your link elements, something like:
<a id='link1' iframe-source='www.google.com'>
<a id='link2' iframe-source='www.yahoo.com'>
And then: (again, just after the toggle):
source = $(this).attr('iframe-source');
$('#frame').attr(src, source);
The reason for saving source if is that if you attempt to get $(this) within the .attr on $('frame'), it will (as always) return the currently matched element, ie $('#frame').
Alternately (and very similiarly to the above approach), you could use the innerHTML of the link. For example:
<a id='link1'>link1<span style="display:none">www.google.com</span></a>
<a id='link2'>link2<span style="display:none">www.yahoo.com</span></a>
And then: (again, just after the toggle):
source = $(this).find('span').text();
$('#frame').attr(src, source);
Personally, I dislike this last method as it pollutes the DOM structure, leading to slightly more expensive rendering times, and (in my opinion) less readable code. Practically, all three methods work just fine.
<p class="link" style="display:none;" data-link="http://google.com/">sfdf</p>
<p class="link" data-link="http://yahoo.com/">ee</p>
$('.link').click(function() {
$('.link').toggle();
$('#frame').text($(this).data("link"));
});
jsfiddle :http://jsfiddle.net/xqDus/1/
Use jQuery toggle()
just add this
Google
Yahoo
target is id of the frame
$(function() {
$('#link1, #link2').click(function() {
$('#link1, #link2').toggle();
});
});
UPDATE: I'm sorry that my thread was misinterpreted by many users. I'll try to be more clear.
I'm using Drupal and I have created three floating banners. On the frontpage there is a block (block1) that displays one floating banner and after refresh the second one is appearing and for the third too.
Like a wrote before these banners has a little X button to stop overflow.
I've putted this script in a one of the banners and it's working great.
<script language="javascript">
function doexpand() {
document.getElementById("block1").style.overflow = "visible";
}
function dolittle() {
document.getElementById("block1").style.overflow = "hidden";
}
</script>
The real problem is that in categories pages I have #block2 and in articles #block3.
These block are displaying the same banners. The code over is working only for a one ID. In this case #block1. document.getElementById is not working for more ID's as I read from other topics.
I've tried with jQuery with two blocks idents like this:
(function ($) {
function doexpand() {
$("#block1,#block2").css("overflow","visible");
}
function dolittle() {
$("#block1,#block2").css("overflow","hidden");
}
})(jQuery);
It's not working.
The firebug/console displays: ReferenceError: doexpand is not defined.
I've tried with a single block too with jQuery like this:
(function ($) {
function doexpand() {
$("#block1").css("overflow","visible");
}
function dolittle() {
$("#block1").css("overflow","hidden");
}
})(jQuery);
and it's displaying the same error.
Note: Drupal has a different wrapping and it's like this:
(function ($) {
//your existing code
})(jQuery);
Please have a look on jQuery Selectors.
I think in your case, it is better to apply style with help of css for multiple elements. e.g. :
<script language="javascript">
function doexpand() {
$('.block').style.overflow="visible";
}
function dolittle() {
$('.block').style.overflow="hidden" ;
}
</script>
Please add class="block" to all of blocks for which you want to apply this style/function, it will apply on all of the blocks having css class "block".
jQuery?
HTML:
<div class="block2"></div>
JS:
function doExpand(selector) {
if ( $(selector).length ) {
$(selector).css({'overflow':'visible'});
}
}
Calling with non ID selector would look like this: (jQuery syntax):
doExpand('.block2');
The above code is perfectly valid in jQuery (which is a JavaScript library).
If you want to use a more typical jQuery code, you can do
$('#block1').css('overflow', 'visible');
You can expend it to multiple id like this :
$('#block1, #block2').css('overflow', 'visible');
You always can get the DOM object from a jQuery object, which means you could also have adapted your code to use jQuery selectors using
$('#block1').get(0).style.overflow="visible";
(this specific example isn't smart : no need to use jQuery if you don't use a complex selector or jQuery functions)
Pretty simple really, jQuery selection is based on css selectors for the most part. These selectors are then translated into an array of dom objects held in a jQuery object.
function doexpand() {
$("#block1").css("overflow","visible");
}
function dolittle() {
$("#block1").css("overflow","hidden");
}
You should never have more than one HTML element with the same ID (Which is why document.getElementById only returns one element)
You can just refeerence block2, block3 directly document.getElementById("block2").style.overflow="hidden" ;
Or use getElementByClassName
var elements = document.getElementsByClassName("yourClass")
Which will pick up all elements with a specific class.
If you want to use jQuery like the other answers are suggesting you can match on the element name. For example:
$('div[id^="block"]').css("overflow", "visible");
This will match all div element where their ID starts with block. You can also use other wildcards such as * for contains and $ for ends with.
Here is your Javascript Code in jQuery. I dont understand what you want do do, but you could pass the params in the function. Example under this code.
<script language="javascript">
function doexpand() {
$("#block1").css({'overflow': 'visible'});
}
function dolittle() {
$("#block1").css({'overflow': 'hidden'});
}
</script>
Here is it
<script language="javascript">
function doexpand(element) {
$("#" + element).css({'overflow': 'visible'});
}
function dolittle(element) {
$("#" + element).css({'overflow': 'hidden'});
}
</script>
Than you could call it like: doexpand("theIDofTheElement");
Alternative to document.getElementById("an_element);
in Jquery is: $("#an_element");
It will work fine in JQuery, it's just that JQuery makes things faster and less verbose.
Note: This question was marked as solved once, but it figured out that upgrading to the latest jQuery was fixed only one issue. Please see the updated question below for the remaining issue.
Hi all,
I have just run into a weird issue with jQuery.Tipsy.
Here's a simplified demo fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/6nWtx/7/
As you can see, the lastly added a.tipsy2 element does not get tipsyfied. The .tipsy2 elements are being tipsyfied within a jQuery.each() function and at this point I have the problem. Without the each() it works. Unfortunately, I need .each() to iterate through the elements to do some other stuff before I call tipsy().
Any suggestion?
Here's the source code of Tipsy: https://github.com/jaz303/tipsy/blob/master/src/javascripts/jquery.tipsy.js
IMHO the problem is using the combination of jQuery.each() and Tipsy option live:true
Update:
The other stuff I want to do before calling .tipsy() is checking for some optional configuration.
For example: Help"
In this example I will add the following option to Tipsy: delayIn:1000 If there is no delayed class associated to the element this parameter will be delayIn:0.
Using the same logic, I want to specify the following classes as well: show-top, show-left, show-right, show-bottom for the Tipsy option called gravity.
Example: Help"
The full code:
$(".tipsyfy").each(function () {
var a = "s",
b = 0;
if ($(this).hasClass("show-left")) a = "w";
else if ($(this).hasClass("show-down")) a = "n";
else if ($(this).hasClass("show-right")) a = "e";
if ($(this).hasClass("delayed") && $(this).attr("data-delayIn") != null) b = $(this).attr("data-delayIn");
$(this).tipsy({
gravity: a,
fade: true,
live: true,
delayIn: b
})
})
And here is a full jsFiddle demo with all the stuffs I want to do: http://jsfiddle.net/xmLBG/1/
If you use jQuery 1.7.1 instead of 1.6.4 it will work. Maybe that live feature is relying on something buggy with the older versions, or some not-yet-implemented feature.
Update: from what I understood, you want the tipsy plugin to be called to every element with the .tipsyfy class, present now or added in the future. You don't want to (or can't) call it explicitly before insertion. You're trying to accomplish that using the live option of the plugin. Is that right?
If that's the case I can offer a workaround. I tried to use on (since jQuery's live is deprecated) to bind some code to the load event, but it didn't work, so I bound it to mouseenter and checked whether or not the plugin was already built for that element. If not, it builds it and re-triggers the event.
$(document).on("mouseenter", ".tipsyfy", function(e) {
if ( !$(this).data("tipsy") ) {
e.preventDefault();
var a = "s",
b = 0;
if ($(this).hasClass("show-left")) a = "e";
else if ($(this).hasClass("show-down")) a = "n";
else if ($(this).hasClass("show-right")) a = "w";
if ($(this).hasClass("delayed") && $(this).attr("data-delayIn") != null) b = $(this).attr("data-delayIn");
$(this).tipsy({
gravity: a,
fade: true,
live: true,
delayIn: b
}).trigger("mouseenter");
return false;
}
});
Live example at jsFiddle.
For a small optimization, if the sole purpose of the .tispsyfy class is to instruct the plugin creation, and you don't need it afterwards, you can remove it prior to re-triggering the mouseenter. This way the checking code won't be called over and over again:
$(this).tipsy({...}).removeClass("tipsyfy").trigger("mouseenter");
As far as I can see, you don't need to iterate the nodelist. It looks like tipsy does that for you (see this jsfiddle, where in the first list every element gets its own tooltip (1,2,3).
KooiInc is right,
<a class="tipsy1" href="#" title="Tipsy">TipsyLink</a>
<a class="tipsy1" href="#" title="Tipsy">TipsyLink</a>
<a class="tipsy1" href="#" title="Tipsy">TipsyLink</a>
<br />
<div id="container"></div>
<input id="add" type="button" value="ok">
And
$(".tipsy1").tipsy({live:true,fade:true});
$(".tipsy2").tipsy({live:true});
$("#add").click(function() {
$("#container").append('<a class="tipsy2" href="#" title="Tipsy">TipsyLink</a>');
});
That will work fine
My guess is that Tipsy are uses some kind of direct mapping to the result, not using the live (in 1.6) or on in newer versions of jQuery.
So when your trying to apply the plugin to the links with the class tipsy2 it cant find any (cause your adding it to the DOM at a later stage in your code). The easiest fix to this is just to run the tipsy function at a later stage, perhaps on document.ready.
// this works
$(".tipsy1").tipsy({live:true,fade:true});
// add new tipsy element (ok)
$(document.body).append('<a class="tipsy1" href="#" title="TipsyAjax">AjaxTipsy1</a><br/>');
// add new tipsy element (not ok)
$(document.body).append('<a class="tipsy2" href="#" title="Tipsy">TipsyLink</a>');
$(document).ready(function () {
$(".tipsy2").each(function(){
// I'm doing some other logic here before I call .tipsy()
$(this).tipsy({live:true,fade:true});
})
});
(http://jsfiddle.net/8dg6S/7/)
Can't you do this instead? It is what you are asking.
$(".tipsy1,.tipsy2").tipsy({live:true,fade:true});
$(".tipsy2").each(function() {
//do your stuff
});
WordPress add an extra 10px to the .wp-caption container when a caption in present. I'm trying to use jQuery to remove the extra 10px. I've been able to do this thanks to the answers in this question, but I realized that b/c there are sometimes multiple images in a post, I need to use something to the effect of .each() to iterate. The code below works for the first image but then wrongly applies the first image's with to the container of the second image. How can I correct the .each() to work properly?
jQuery().ready(function() {
jQuery(".wp-caption").each(function(n) {
var width = jQuery(".wp-caption img").width();
jQuery(".wp-caption").width(width);
});
});
Example w/ javascript on
Example w/ javascript off
Update: The most streamlined solution from below:
jQuery().ready(function( $ ) {
$(".wp-caption").width(function() {
return $('img', this).width();
});
});
Or substituting $ with jQuery to prevent conflicts:
jQuery().ready(function( jQuery ) {
jQuery(".wp-caption").width(function() {
return jQuery('img', this).width();
});
});
Both work! =)
this is a reference to the current element in the .each().
jQuery().ready(function( $ ) {
$(".wp-caption").each(function(n) {
var width = $(this).find("img").width();
$(this).width(width);
});
});
...so from this, you use the find()[docs] method to get the descendant <img>, and its width().
You could also pass a function directly to width(), and it will iterate for you.
jQuery().ready(function( $ ) {
$(".wp-caption").width(function(i,val) {
return $(this).find("img").width();
});
});
...here, the return value of the function will be the width set to the current .wp-caption.
EDIT: Updated to use the common $ reference inside the .ready() handler.